FIRST
GROUP OF K-12 EDUCATORS TO RECEIVE MASTER'S DEGREES ONLINE TO GRADUATE
MAY 14
News From the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Mailed 5/10/00
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- The first group of K-12 educators
to earn master's degrees online from the University of Illinois'
College of Education will receive their diplomas May 14 at the UI's
spring commencement.
Twenty-six educators, mostly a mix of classroom teachers
and school technology coordinators, enrolled in the new program
two years ago and came to orientation sessions on campus. All 26
will graduate, no small feat in distance education, where losing
half the students in a course is not uncommon, said Jim Levin, director
of the program. The focus of the program is Curriculum, Technology
and Education Reform (CTER).
Much of the case for online education has tended to
center on efficiency -- on the prospect of teaching more students
for less. In CTER OnLine, however, which Levin describes as "explicitly
an experiment," the emphasis has been on how to use the technology
to create the best learning environment, as well as a sense of community
often lacking in distance education. "The notion of community,
I think, has played a key role in the fact that all of these people
are still with us," he said.
According to Sandy Levin, coordinator of the program,
"we're actually taking the best of both worlds -- the best
of what has come out of distance education and the best of what
has come out in our own campus courses -- and trying to combine
it and provide the support and flexibility to the students at the
same time."
Since the students are practicing educators, their
teachers are education professors, and much of the subject matter
involves the use of educational technology, the online program has
been an exercise in learning, practice and research rolled into
one.
"Many of these students were participating right
from their classrooms, at breaks and lunch and after school,"
noted Greg Waddoups, a UI graduate student, now at Brigham Young
University, who studied the effectiveness of CTER's methods and
strategies for his doctoral thesis.
"Most everything they do in the online classroom
is [interpreted] through their experience as K-12 teachers or practitioners,"
Waddoups said, and much of what they learn can be tried immediately
with their own students or with other teachers. It enabled a kind
of online apprenticeship, he said, a concept researched by Jim Levin
and other UI faculty members.
The CTER students also made their own research contribution,
a series of educators' guides on technology issues, available on
the Web at http://lrs.ed.uiuc.edu/wp. The guides cover topics such
as access, evaluating Web content, free speech versus censorship,
privacy, commercialism, copyright and plagiarism, and computer crime
and misuse. According to the UI instructors who evaluated the guides,
they may be "the best overview of these issues, written by
and for educators and their particular concerns, available on the
Web."
The need clearly existed for a program like CTER OnLine,
said Shellie Brunsman, a learning disabilities teacher at Pleasant
Hill Elementary School in Springfield. "There were quite a
few of us who were waiting for this."
Before starting the program, Brunsman made use of
technology, but mostly for "very surface types of things,"
like simple "skill and drill" educational CDs. "Now,
when I'm using it for instruction, I'm using it for more meaty things,
more in depth," she said.
For Tammy McLane, another CTER student and the technology
coordinator for the Argenta-Oreana School District in Argenta, the
program met a similar need. "The real obstacle to a teacher,
I think, is 'How do I really, truly integrate this into my classroom?
How do I choose which things that I'm already doing could I do better
with a computer?' " she said. "And it's hard to find that
kind of training out there."
Now, when Brunsman teaches a unit on weather, she
knows her lesson plan can include a visit to an interactive Web
site on tornadoes. For a lesson on Thanksgiving, she can use the
Web to provide a virtual tour of Plymouth Plantation. As a way to
get students more engaged, she can have them develop electronic
portfolios of their work, which can then be posted on the Internet
to be shared with parents or distant relatives.
The Internet, in particular, Brunsman said, "is
probably one of the biggest resources we have, but we don't know
how to effectively manage it." Parents and teachers both worry
about kids finding inappropriate material, and teachers often don't
have the time or know-how for finding the online educational gems
they could use, she said. One significant benefit of the CTER class
was in just learning where those resources could be found, both
from UI professors and her fellow students.
"I think [the computer] is like any tool -- if
you know how to use it, you can use it wisely and can use it effectively,"
Brunsman said. McLane now is motivated to work harder with teachers
to make the computer "just something that we take for granted
we have wonderful teachers that aren't using technology, but I just
think they could be even better."
Both Brunsman and McLane noted that significant benefits
from the program came simply from the interaction online with other
students, some of whom were computer pros and some of whom were
novices, but knowledgeable in other areas. Encouraging that interaction
was designed into the program, both for social reasons and to foster
a more engaged learning on the part of students, Sandy Levin said.
"We're having students use what they know to increase what
they know," she said.
Jim Levin noted that despite the rush to put education
online, the medium is still so new that much of the talk about efficiencies
and other benefits is premature. "In a sense, you're missing
most of the value of the new medium" by simply transferring
from the old, he said. "We really have to invent the means,
the frameworks, the uses, and evaluate which ones work, before we
can then start to address what are the costs and what are the benefits."
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