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Online Learning in Higher Education: Contributors to the Tipping Point in a South African Institution Sarah-Anne Arnol

Online Learning in Higher Education: Contributors to the Tipping Point in a South African Institution Sarah-Anne Arnold University of Cape Town, Graduate School of Business Presented at e / merge 2012: Open to Change , Cape Town 11-13 July 2012. Change in Higher Education (HE).

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Online Learning in Higher Education: Contributors to the Tipping Point in a South African Institution Sarah-Anne Arnol

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  1. Online Learning in Higher Education: Contributors to the Tipping Point in a South African Institution Sarah-Anne Arnold University of Cape Town, Graduate School of Business Presented at e/merge 2012: Open to Change, Cape Town 11-13 July 2012

  2. Change in Higher Education (HE) Increasing ICT adoption in developed economies (Livingstone, 2011) Challenging tertiary institutions from the inside (Czerniewicz & Brown, 2009) Hype about disruptive nature of ICT in HE (Christensen & Eyrling, 2011)

  3. This study addresses the problem of identifying when online learning will move from minority use to the mainstream, and in particular aims to identify the main factors leading to the Tipping Point of online learning adoption in a department at a selected South African higher education institution (HEI).

  4. Tipping Point Framework (Gladwell, 2000) • Environment: Is the higher education institutions (HEIs) environment conducive for online learning adoption? • Properties: What is the attraction of online learning adoption? • Messengers: Who are the decision-makers in online learning adoption? • 21st century students • 20th century academic staff • 19th century institutions

  5. Context of the Study Country:South Africa HEI:University of Cape Town, Western Cape • No national policy for ICT in HE (Czerniewicz & Brown, 2009) • Ranked 72nd out of 142 countries in the Networked Readiness Index (WEF NRI, 2012) • Slow broadband speeds (Net Index, 2011) • High connectivity costs (WEF NRI, 2012)

  6. ICTs and South Africa

  7. Academic Staff Interviews Adoption Categorization Sample • One department (located in Engineering and the Built Environment faculty). • Six academic staff (two full-time lecturers, a professor, a part-time lecturer, a programme convener and a head of department). • Standard semi-structured, open-ended set of questions. • Interview length 40 – 75 minutes. • Conducted between the 12th October and the 9th November 2011. • All interviews were recorded and immediately transcribed verbatim by the researcher and analysed for further direction. Rogers Adoption Categorization on the Basis of Innovativeness (Rogers, 2003, p. 281)

  8. Research Interview Questions • How would you characterize the role of online learning in your department? • What are the benefits of using the online learning tools you use? • What are the disadvantages of using the online learning tools you use? • How are the online learning tools used or integrated into or with offline learning? • In relation to learning, have you seen any significant changes at UCT? • What will lead to large-scale adoption of online learning in your department? • Given my interest in online learning is there anything else I should ask you or you wish to share?

  9. 21stCentury Students • ‘Now this little creature [student] is something different’ (Academic Staff Interview, 2011) • ‘So they [students] are putting the pressure on [lecturers] to use [the LMS] as a means of communication with them and for sharing of material and resources’(Academic Staff Interview, 2011)

  10. Student Survey Results • Preferred channel to address course administrative issues is Vula (the LMS) • Preferred channel to communicate with lecturers is UCT email account • Preferred channel to communicate with classmates is in person • Preferred location to study or learn is at home

  11. 20thCentury Academic Staff • ‘Technology is a tool. It isn’t teaching. It is a tool so if I feel I um, the tools I currently use are fine why should I change? Just because it's a fad, and it’s popular and it’s fast... why use it if you feel your existing tools are fine. Is that a dinosauric approach?’ (Interview Professor, 2011) • ‘It is a passion [online learning]… But it didn’t make me an expert.’ (Interview Champion of Online Learning, 2011)

  12. 19thCentury Institutions • ‘But the question as an institution is, what is your potential to attract people like that? What are you doing about developing people like that? Do you fire them if they are not spitting out three papers? There is a point we could say as an institution if we took teaching and learning very seriously we would show more evidence of it in recruitment and promotion processes.’ (Interview HOD, 2011)

  13. Environment Is the HEI’s environment conducive for online learning adoption? • Information Revolution • Knowledge Economy • Connected Societies • Notion of “Modern University” • Internet speed • Internet cost • Device ownership • Increasing student numbers & diversity • Policy (contact HEI) • Identity (research HEI) • Culture (autonomous decision-making) • Values

  14. Properties What is the attraction of online learning adoption?

  15. Online Learning Attraction • Greatest adoption (and motivation to adopt) was seen when lecturers experienced a relatively high state of dissatisfaction with their current situation. • Dissatisfaction with a current state seemed to consistently originate from three key variables: increasing student numbers, increasing diversity in the student population and decreasing student interactionand engagement. • The perceived advantages of the LMS and its value to academic staff and students were attracting lecturers to take up online learning. Relative advantages included: time saved on administrative tasks and increased quality of communication and interaction in teaching. • Relative advantage and compatibility seemed strongest in persuading adoption.

  16. Messengers Who are the decision-makers in online learning adoption in relation to the environment? • Course evaluations • Collective requests and pressure • Increasing workloads • Increasing student numbers • Widening diversity amongst undergraduates • Regaining student engagement and interaction • Notion of a 21st century HEI • Past experiences • Perceptions • Beliefs, Values • Interests / Motivations • Needs (unsatisfactory)

  17. Conclusion • The environment has a significant influence on individuals within any system. These pressures are forceful in that they are complex and uncontrollable. The HE landscape is becoming increasingly competitive as individuals and organisations keep up on the treadmill of technology, information and progress. • Epidemics occur when a system in equilibrium receives a particular sort of jolt (Daynes, Esplin & Kristensen, 2004). Referring to the three HE environments – global, local and institutional – it would appear institutionally individual efforts have jolted other lecturers into action, resulting in pockets of innovation across the HEI. As individuals are susceptible to their immediate surroundings and nearby personalities (Gladwell, 2000) it would seem a jolt in the local or global HE environment (for example entry of an acclaimed international HEI into the South African HE market) would have greater force in pushing senior leadership/management into addressing online learning and its role in a university.

  18. … continued • The attractive properties (Gladwell, 2000) of online learning in the South African context look as if they are helping academic staff service a changing student body. The current ‘Mavens’ (Gladwell, 2000) or champions of online learning in HEIs have started the epidemic by providing the message of innovation. However ‘Mavens’ do not make ‘Salesmen’ (Gladwell, 2000): the latter who are essential for online learning to reach critical mass. The strongest persuaders in the current context (HEI culture and policies) are most likely to be the ‘relative advantage’ (Rogers, 2003) that online learning offers lecturers as they struggle to fulfill the increasing demands of their three roles – administration, teaching and research.

  19. References • Czerniewicz, L. & Brown, C. (2009) A virtual wheel of fortune? Enablers and constraints of ICTs in higher education in South Africa. In S. Marshall, W. Kinuthia, & W. Taylor (Eds.), Bridging the knowledge divide: Educational technology for development. Colorado: Information Age Publishing. • Christensen, C. M., & Eyring, H. J. (2011) The Innovative University: Changing the DNA of Higher Education from the Inside Out. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. • Daynes, G., Esplin, P., & Kristensen, K. (2004) Learning as an epidemic: The tipping point, Freshman Academy, and institutional change. Perspectives, 8(4), 113-118. • Gladwell, M. (2000) The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference. London, Abacus. • Livingstone, S. (2011) Critical reflections on the benefits of ICT in education. Oxford Review of Education, DOI:10.1080/03054985.2011.577938. • Net Index Statistics. (2011) Available from: http://mybroadband.co.za/news/broadband/28756- best-broadband-speeds-in-south-africa.html [31 August 2011]. • Rogers, E. (2003) Diffusion of Innovation. New York, Free Press. • WEF NRI (2011). Global Information Technology Report, Retrieved August 31, 2011 from http://www2.weforum.org/site/homepublic.nsf/Content/Global+Competitiveness+Programme/Global+Infor mation+Technology+Report.html • WEF NRI (2012). Global Information Technology Report, Retrieved June 30, 2012 from http://www3.weforum.org/docs/GITR/2012/GITR_OverallRankings_2012.pdf

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