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A National and International Perspective on the Future of Online Learning

A National and International Perspective on the Future of Online Learning. Susan Patrick President & CEO International Association for K-12 Online Learning. International Perspective. Alternative energy Desalination of water Precision farming Biometrics Quantum computers

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A National and International Perspective on the Future of Online Learning

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  1. A National and International Perspective on the Future of Online Learning Susan Patrick President & CEO International Association for K-12 Online Learning

  2. International Perspective

  3. Alternative energy Desalination of water Precision farming Biometrics Quantum computers Entertainment on demand Global access Virtual education or distance learning Nanotechnology Smart Robots World Future Society Top 10 breakthroughs transforming life over the next 20-30 yearsBest forecast data ever assembled

  4. iNACOL Canada StudyAll 13 Provinces and Territories offer K-12 online learning

  5. eLearning Ontario • Ontario Ministry of Education - eLearning Ontario • Provides LMS for all 72 districts • Funds and oversees the development of eLearning courses • Online content uploaded into the Ontario Educational Resource Bank (OERB) which all Ontario teachers, students and parents can access • Solutions for credit recovery, differentiated instruction and as a study tool for students • Online courses at day schools funded at the same level as face-2-face day school courses  • The eLearning Ontario website is http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/elearning   

  6. European Union • EU: • EU E-Learning Action Plan • IB Diploma ProgrammeOnline (125 countries) • UK: E-Learning Exports - 29 billion pounds annually; deal with China • Education as an export

  7. Turkey, the Middle East & Arab Spring • Turkey: online courses • Arab Bureau of Education for the Gulf States

  8. South Korea • South Korea • National Virtual School • Switch to digital content from textbooks

  9. Hong Kong • Blended learning for Continuity of Learning

  10. China • China: 1.3 billion people • Digitized K-12 curriculum • Training Master Teachers to teach online • With online learning: increase educational opportunities to 100 million new students

  11. The Futurist: Education 2011 China may be the first country to succeed in educating most of its population through the Internet. • From 2003-2007, China spent about $1 billion to implement online learning projects in the rural country-side.

  12. “Web opens world for young Chinese . . .”-Christian Science Monitor, May 14, 2007 • Bejing -- “Excited and emboldened by the wealth of information they find on the Internet, Chinese teens are breaking centuries of tradition to challenge their teachers and express their opinions in class. . . .” • “Students at Tianjin’s No. 1 Middle School are encouraged to challenge their history texts.” • “The Internet has given Chinese children wings,” says Sun Yun Xiao, vice president of the China Youth and Children’s Research Center. • 137 million online in China at the end of 2006 (in 1999 there were just 4 million connections in China) • 87% of urban youth in China use the Internet

  13. Singapore • Singapore: 100% of Secondary schools use online learning • Life skills to cultivate to become successful in global information economy • All teachers trained to teach online • LMS, online facilitation, rubrics for grading student work online, digital content • Blended Learning • E-Learning Weeks

  14. US: Challenge to Innovate & Engage Do all students have access to a world-class education? How do we personalize education for every student – providing them with 21st century skills, knowledge and global perspectives?

  15. U.S. Online Learning Facts • 48 states have significant state policies (KP 2010) • 32 states have state virtual schools • 27 states allow 220 full-time virtual charter schools with over 225,000 students (CER) • K-12 online learning enrollments growing 30% annually (50,000 in 2000; 2 million enrollments in 2008-2009; 4 million in 2011). • 4states require an online course for high school graduation • 82% of school districts had one or more students in a fully-online or blended course • More universities are offering K-12 courses online • Indiana U, Univ of Montana, Nebraska; Stanford, JHU, Northwestern programs for gifted

  16. Providing Opportunities to All Students Traditional Public/Private Accelerated Students Credit Recovery Medically Fragile Need to work and/or support family Rural Students Aspiring athletes and performers Home Schoolers Special Education and ELL

  17. Project Tomorrow Survey (2009) • Benefits of taking a class online? • According to students: • 51% said it allows them to work at their own pace • 44% said it allows them to take a class not offered on campus • 35% said it was to get extra help • 19% said they took online courses to get more attention from teachers • 49% to earn college credit

  18. Source: Susan Patrick, iNACOL

  19. How Students Learn

  20. Future Trends • Online & Blended Learning • Competency-based approaches • Mobile learning • National: • CCSSO Partnership for Next Gen Learning • Gates Foundation’s Next Generation Learning • Shared Learning Infrastructure • Openly architected IT systems - draw in vast online content, learning analytics, personalized learning maps for each student’s own learning trajectory

  21. Concept of competency-based pathways - definition • Competency-based learning is defined as: • Students advance upon mastery. • Competencies include explicit, measurable, transferable learning objectives that empower students. • Assessment experience is meaningful and positive to students • Students receive timely, differentiated support based on their individual learning needs. • Learning outcomes emphasize competencies that include application and creation of knowledge, along with the development of important skills and dispositions.

  22. Next Generation LearningShifting the Focus to the Student • CCSSO – Six Critical Attributes for Next Generation Learning – Design Principles for New Systems for Learning • World Class Knowledge and Skills • Planning for Personalized Learning • Authentic Student Voice • Comprehensive Systems of Support • Performance-based Learning • Anytime, everywhere learning

  23. Next Generation Learning Models • In this paradigm of “next generation learning models,” students and teachers – from secondary to postsecondary – will access high-quality, relevant and engaging content in multiple modalities. • Class time and structure will become more flexible, based on the learning needs of the students. • Students will access multiple sources of instruction as needed and use assessments and diagnostics to gain more control over the pace and format of their own learning. • And teachers will spend their time in different ways, tailoring their help to ensure acceleration and mastery for all students, with a focus on those who have historically been underserved.

  24. Competency-based learning Performance or competency based learning is fundamental to personalizing learning at scale and It challenges almost all of our assumptions about the present system

  25. “Using the Internet to deliver courses seems to contain great disruptive potential. It could allow a radical transformation to happen in an incremental, rational way.” - Clayton Christensen, Harvard Business School

  26. My Agenda • Policy • Quality Assurance • New Learning Models Goal is student-centered: dramatically improve student learning outcomes for every student to develop knowledge and skills to be successful in global economy

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