Shifting Toward Best Practices in Online Learning
Utah Senate Bill 65 was recently passed, which establishes a statewide online education network, where students can earn credits from different schools. As a result, our attention has shifted toward fully online courses and how we can implement them, and how we can improve our existing hybrid courses.
There are a good number of teachers in Weber School District using Moodle, but we’re struggling with getting teachers over the learning curve. And the problem is the same as one identified by Lane 2009. For our teachers, Moodle is a counterintuitive interface which “stops Web novices in their tracks” (p. 4). “Educational technologists look at a [course management system] and see its many features, but faculty see an inflexible system that cannot be customized” (p. 6). There are probably very few teachers in our district that have taught in a fully online learning environment, let alone do so effectively by adjusting their pedagogy accordingly.
I realize Moodle is frustrating for some of our teachers, but I also realize now that it’s our fault. We handed them a default course template that does not adopt best practices in online learning. Moodle’s topical format isn’t particularly pretty, and I’ve seen some teachers’ online courses that scroll forever downward with a neverending pile of assignments and resources. It is, quite frankly, confusing. As a result, we are redesigning the Moodle course format and implementing our own. The goal is to make an interface that’s more intuitive for novice online/hybrid teachers, makes it easier to navigate for students, and encourages stronger constructivist methodologies in the instructional practices.
What Utah is doing right now with online courses, I imagine one day will happen with professional development, even if not formally mandated. If we can share educational courses for K-12 students statewide, why not the same for teachers? There are many similarities and best practices we can identify in both K-12 and adult online courses, such as a strong focus on collaboration — the lack of a physical social presence necessitates a stronger cyber-social presence. Teachers should encourage discussion among students, and give numerous opportunities for interaction and collaborative learning. And as noted in a study by Arbaugh (2000), students in web-based courses conversed more than the old brick-and-mortar classrooms (as cited in Ternus, Palmer, & Faulk, 2007).
Collaboration was the primary focus in our Moodle class at the BrainBlast conference last summer. Yet as I discovered in my recent evaluation of Moodle, there has been little to no change in how our teachers use Moodle for collaboration. If it’s true that in the hybrid course, we must meet best practices for both online learning and classroom learning, then we need to place more focus on the online learning space in Moodle, and use it as a constructivist learning environment, rather than just a repository for stashing assignments and quizzes (Ternus, Palmer, & Faulk, 2007). Likewise, any future online professional development class we build must follow the same standards of highly constructivist learning if it is to truly succeed.
References
Arbaugh, J. B. (2000). Virtual classroom characteristics and student satisfaction with Internet-based MBA courses. Journal of Management Education, 24(1), 32-54.
Lane, L. M. (2009). Insidious pedagogy: How course management systems affect teaching. First Monday, 14(10).
Ternus, M. P., Palmer, K. L., & Faulk, D. R. (2007). Benchmarking Quality in Online Teaching and Learning: A Rubric for Course Construction and Evaluation. Journal of Effective Teaching, 7(2), 51-67.
Related articles
- A blend of Moodle and Web 2.0 technologies (cruiselyna.wordpress.com)
- Can I look at your Moodle……please? (edugeek.net)
- Merits of Moodle (weber.k12.ut.us)
Hey Justin, I would love to see your redesigned course formats if you are willing to share. I agree with what you have to say about Moodle and other VLEs in general.
We’re still working on it. We’re loosing basing it on BrainHoney’s course management approach, plus Moodlerooms’ page-based navigation approach, except with nice drag-and-drop features so it’s a simplistic approach for any teacher. We have some other more pressing projects on the table, and I don’t expect final results for a couple more months at least, but I have every intention of open-sourcing the code.
Thanks for such a quick response Justin. I look forward to seeing what you have done as we are looking at LMS platforms at the moment and Moodle is in the mix along with Blackboard, Desire2Learn and Instructure Canvas, which I believe was just adopted by the higher ed institutions and a number of k12 folks there in Utah.
Yes it was, particularly by the Utah EHS. Though honestly, I think EHS is probably going to reverse that within a few years. As nice as Canvas is, I have a hard time seeing that stick…it was more of a political decision than a practical one. I’d also like to eventually get a statewide Moodle network going, so hopefully more school districts in Utah will jump on the Moodle bandwagon.
Very interesting. I wondered if there was some politics involved especially in light of the lawsuit that D2L filed and then dropped. Have you made the jump to Moodle 2.0 or 2.1?
I’m not sure about all the details regarding the shift. I have a hard time believing D2L’s complaining had much to do with it, since from what I understand, they were griping AFTER Instructure got the contract.
As for Moodle 2.1, we haven’t upgraded yet. I was waiting for 2.1 (which barely came out) since full course migration wasn’t fully/officially supported before then, and I’m not going to make our teachers redo everything. Honestly, I don’t see us migrating until next school year, as I simply don’t have time to do it this summer…which is fine with me…except I also don’t want to have to do a lot of work to upgrade the custom course format we come up with to be compatible with 2.x. I don’t think it would be a ton of extra effort, especially if it’s designed for cross-compatibility. We’re still weighing the options, and I’d like to avoid having to postpone the new course format implementation until summer 2012 if at all possible.