1 / 39

Dr. Allison Powell Vice President, State and District Services

A National Overview of K-12 Online Learning. Dr. Allison Powell Vice President, State and District Services. International Association for K-12 Online Learning ( i NACOL). i NACOL is the premier K-12 nonprofit in online learning

jerica
Download Presentation

Dr. Allison Powell Vice President, State and District Services

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A National Overview of K-12 Online Learning Dr. Allison Powell Vice President, State and District Services

  2. International Association for K-12 Online Learning (iNACOL) • iNACOL is the premier K-12 nonprofit in online learning • 3700+ members in K-12 virtual schools and online learning representing over 50 countries • Provides leadership, advocacy, research, training, and networking with experts in K-12 online learning. • “Ensure every student has access to the best education available regardless of geography, income or background.” • Conference – Virtual School Symposium (VSS): Indianapolis, IN on November 9-11, 2011

  3. What Students Need to Know: 21st Century Skills and ICT Literacy The future will demand people who can express themselves effectively with images, animation, sound, and video, solve real world problems that require processing and analysis of thousands of numbers, evaluate information for accuracy, reliability, and validity; and organize information into valuable knowledge, yet students are not learning these skills in school.

  4. Who Are Our Students? • Largest generation (36% of total population). • In 2000, 100 million between ages of 0-24 years old • 31% are minorities; more diverse than the adult population. • Have come of age along with the Internet. • Growing up in challenging times: 60% of teens feel it is harder being a young person today than in parent’s time (up from 35% in 1966) • Information has been universally available and free to them; community is a digital place of common interest, not just a shared physical space. • Some employers & educators have labeled this generation the “entitlement generation”

  5. Students: Born in 1992 • Few in the class know how to write in cursive. • Email is just too slow, and they seldom if ever use snail mail. • They’ve never recognized that pointing to their wrists was a request for the time of day. • DNA fingerprinting and maps of the human genome have always existed. • Czechoslovakia has never existed. • A quarter of young people under 18 have at least one immigrant parent, they aren't afraid of immigration...unless it involves "real" aliens from another planet. • The first home computer they probably touched was an Apple II or Mac II; they are now in a museum. • Clint Eastwood is better known as a sensitive director than as Dirty Harry. • Having hundreds of cable channels but nothing to watch has always been routine. • Potato has always ended in an “e” in New Jersey per vice presidential edict. • They have always been able to read books on an electronic screen. -From the Beloit College “Mindset List 2014”

  6. Today’s Student Demographics • Studies show that they are a capable, conscientious, concerned and optimistic generation, determined to succeed: • 96 percent say that doing well in school is important to their lives. • 94 percent say they plan to continue their education after high school. • 90 percent of children between 5-17 use computers. • 94 percent of teens use the Internet for school-related research. • More than 3/4 are creators of content on the Internet • Teens spend more time online using the Internet than watching television.

  7. Obsolete Life Concepts • Education K through 20 • One career per lifetime • Retirement at age 65 • “Leisure” from retirement to death Source: Business Week, October 24, 2005. The Futurist, Nov-Dec 2005

  8. New Life Concepts • Lifelong Learning • Working in “stints” • Becoming a “portfolio of skills” • Cycling between work, education, and leisure from birth to death Source: Glen Helmstra (www.futurist.com)

  9. Millennial Mindspace:Iconoculture’sNancy Robinson • Global outlook at a younger age • Mobile multi-media, more interactive and community-building, socially networked environments to live, play and learn • TiVo: time-shifting, on-demand, customization • “TV is boring, you can’t customize it.” • Demand an unprecedented amount of control of media and they “are not going to give it up” • “It’s not about being anaesthetized, it is about being engaged.” • Internet as a creator of community

  10. Millennial Values: Implications for Education • Today’s students value: • Freedom and choice • Customization and personalization • Ability to scrutinize and provide feedback for improvement • Integrity and openness • Want collaboration and “serious play” in their education (project-based, real-life experiences in learning) • Ability to move fast, at their own pacing • Constant innovation

  11. Expectations of Education • Millennials want: • Clear guidelines, rules and goals • Responsiveness and fast feedback • Customization and interactivity when learning in a community where open, inclusive and diverse thinking is encouraged • Project-based, team-oriented learning • Involvement in community and volunteer opportunities • “Stand up talking is deadly for this group”

  12. Recommendations fromGenerational Learning Styles • Develop online learning communities, online discussion boards, social networking for discussion and analysis. • Develop opportunities for experiential learning, field experiences, simulations and case method approaches. • Provide lots of structure. • Provide lots of feedback. • Use technology, blended classes and online learning. • Allow for creativity. • Recognize the need for social interaction and ultra-communication. • Allow focus time, reflection time and discussion time; Give these multi-taskers structure through course design. - Julia Coates

  13. Offering Academic Options • Provides educational options to students unavailable at local school • Provides equal access to educational opportunities regardless of location, socio-economic status, etc. • Allows for scheduling flexibility (Students have access 24-7 from any Internet-connected computer.) • Provides an NCLB highly qualified teacher in every classroom • Meets the specialized needs of students (hospital/homebound, special education, student athletes, etc.) • Personalizes education to address specific learning styles and student educational needs • Multiple assessment types • Content differentiation

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

  15. US Online Learning Facts • 32 states have state virtual schools (KP 2011) • 8 state have online learning initiatives (KP 2011) • 46 states have significant state policies (KP 2009) • 27 states and Washington DC allow over 220 full-time virtual charter schools with over 225,000 students (CER) • 2 states require an online course for high school graduation • 30% of all employers use e-learning for training, in 5 years it will be 50% • 1 in 4 undergraduate and graduate student enrolls in an online course in higher education • 75 % of school districts had one or more students in a fully-online or blended course • More universities are offering K-12 courses online • MIT open courseware for K-12 students • Stanford, Northwestern programs for gifted • K-12 Online Learning enrollments growing 30% annually nationwide with 50,000 in 2000 over 2 million enrollments in 2008-2009

  16. State Online Learning Trends & Examples • Idaho and Georgia: endorsement for online teaching at the SEA • Boise State University Ed Tech – online teaching • Georgia Department of Education • Michigan and Alabama: online learning HS graduation requirement • Montana: new state virtual school • Managed by the University of Montana’s College of Education

  17. State Online Learning Trends & Examples • Florida: • funded through performance-budgeting system • New Mexico • PK-20 Partnership (dual credit, prof dev., etc.) • Texas: • TX Virtual School Network, clearinghouse for districts to review and offer online courses and provides funding for each course enrollment in addition to the student FTE at the district • Using SREB and iNACOL National Standards to evaluate online course quality

  18. International Trends in Online Learning • Mexico • K-12 Digital Content, Laptop for Every Teacher, Pre-service methods using engaging digital content, new strategies • Turkey • 0-15 million enrollments in 3 years • Canada • All 13 Provinces and Territories offer K-12 online learning • South Korea • National Virtual School • Hong Kong & Singapore • Blended learning for Continuity of Learning

  19. India • Size • 1 billion+, 70 % rural population • Need 200,000 more schools • 29 Languages (none of which are English) • Internet Accessibility 2007-08 - 42 million users (3.7%) • Online Learning • Universal Access for K-12 Education in 10 yrs • Shortage of good teachers • Leverage teachers using technology to bring to scale • Educomp Program digitizing learning resources (online content) in K-12 Education • Viewed as export opportunity

  20. 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

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

  22. Australia • Pioneer in distance education, mainly servicing isolated rural schools and families • Curriculum breadth and opportunities for students in rural and small schools still limited • Online provision available in each state served via Blackboard, Moodle etc • Nationally, much is first generation online content – flat text, limited interactivity and use of Web 2.0 capacity • Federal funded national rollout of 1:1 computing across years 9-12 by end of 2011

  23. New Zealand • Professional Development – ICT PD • Teacher Laptop Program • National Broadband Initiative • Virtual Learning Network

  24. Singapore • Singapore: 100% of Secondary schools use online learning • All teachers trained to teach online • Blended Learning Environments • E-Learning Weeks

  25. Contingency Plans: H1N1

  26. Trends in Education: Next Generation Models ofOnline and BlendedLearning • Buffet: F2F & Online Courses • Emporium: F2F place with blended/hybrid approaches to learning Hybrid/ Blended Programs • Online course and/or • Online content • Online instruction • LMS/Technology Blended Courses

  27. New Solutions through Online Learning • 40% of US high schools do not offer AP courses • 75% of districts use online learning to offer Advanced Placement or college-level courses. • Teacher Shortages • 40% of public school districts in America today say they need online learning resources because certified teachers are not available for traditional face-to-face instruction. • 60% of schools and districts say they need online learning for credit recovery. • More than 50% need online learning to reduce student scheduling conflicts to graduate on time.

  28. Trends: Higher Ed Online Learning • Sloan-C “Survey of Online Learning” titled, “Learning on Demand: Online Education in the United States in 2009” studied higher education online enrollments: • 1 in 4 college students take an online course • 4.6 million online course enrollments in higher education • 73% of institutions had increased demand for existing online courses • Growth from economy and H1N1 flu outbreak • Use of online education was strong for H1N1 contingency plans • 20% of schools not offering online classes were introducing online courses as part of H1N1 (academic continuity) contingency plans • 74% of public higher education institutions view online education as critical for long-term strategy

  29. Project Tomorrow Survey (2009) • Benefits of taking a class online? • According to students: • 51% said it allows them to work at their own pace • 49% to earn college credit • 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

  30. Online Learning Research • #1 Online Learning Expands Options • “The first impetus to the growth of K-12 distance education was an interest in expanding educational options and providing equal opportunities for all learners.” (NCREL 2005) • #2 Online Learning Is Rapidly Growing • “Recent Surveys show that K-12 online learning is a rapidly growing phenomenon.” • Growing 30% annually • 50,000 enrollments in 2000 • Over 2,000,000 enrollments in 2009

  31. Online Learning Research • #3 Is Effective: “Better” • U.S. Department of Education Report of Online Learning Better than Face-to-Face (USED 2009) • #4 Improves Teaching • Teachers who teach online reported positive improvements in face-to-face, too. • “Of those who reported teaching face-to-face while teaching online or subsequently, three in four reported a positive impact on their face-to-face teaching.”

  32. Quality in Online Learning • iNACOL National Standards of Quality • Online Courses (2007) • Online Teaching (2008) • Online Programs (2009) • Online Leaders (In planning stages) • State Reviews • Texas, Washington, California, Virginia (list) • Regional Accreditation

  33. Disrupting Class (2008) • Customized learning will help more students succeed in school • Student-centric classrooms will increase the demand for new technology • Computers must be disruptively deployed to every student • Disruptive innovation can circumvent roadblocks that have prevented other attempts at school reform • In 2019, 50% of high school courses will be delivered online

  34. iNACOL Resources • iNACOL Professional Development: • Virtual School Symposium – 1,500+ attendees • Monthly Webinars: Leadership and Teacher Talk • K-12 Online Learning Reports • Promising Practices for K-12 Online Learning • Funding and Policy Frameworks • Management and Operations of Online Programs • National Standards for Quality Online Programs (2009) • iNACOL Continuity of Learning website: www.inacol.org/col • iNACOL - C.A.V.E. Island on Second Life • Community of Academic Virtual Educators (C.A.V.E. Island) in partnership with Boise State University’s ED TECH program • iNACOL Membership Committees: • Research • Program/VSS planning committee • Western States; Midwestern, etc . . . and other geographic committees

  35. Contact Information Dr. Allison Powell apowell@inacol.org www.inacol.org

More Related