Best Bets Archives
Administration
Assessment and Evaluation
Assistive Technologies
Associations and Organizations
Free Information Sources
Innovative Technologies
Instructional Resources
Laws and Legislation
Student Support Services
Current Issue of BEEP
Past Issues of BEEP
Printable Versions
Best Bets Archive
Project Eagle
For a subscription to BEEP, contact the Project Manager: lechnerj@spcollege.edu
|
|
Hybrid Courses:
Blending Online and Face-to-Face Instruction
"...for us, the future is in hybrid courses, where some of the fixed-seat
time is replaced by technology-delivered content."
Ron Bleed, Maricopa Community Colleges,
Quoted in "Who We Really Are," by Mary Grush, Campus Technology, January 2005
This issue offers a close examination of the hybrid or blended course, an
increasingly popular alternative in which face-to-face and online
instruction are combined to a greater or lesser extent. Not simply adding some
technical components to a traditional course, hybrids require complete course
redesign to function successfully. Included here are links to both background
information and examples of individual efforts.
Background and Theory
-
"Blended
Learning and Sense of Community: A Comparative Analysis with Traditional and
Fully Online Graduate Courses." Article by Alfred P. Rovai and Hope M.
Jordan, both of Regent University (VA), in International Review of Research
in Open and Distance Learning, August 2004. Suggests that blended courses
produce a stronger sense of community among students than either traditional
or fully online courses.
-
Blended Learning Design: Five Key Ingredients. Article by Jared M.
Carman on the KnowledgeNet Website, October 2002, which discusses the
theories and pedagogic approaches that support blended learning. The five
key ingredients are live events, self-paced learning, collaboration,
assessment, and performance support materials.
-
Hybrid Course
FAQs. Website maintained by Sacramento City College (CA) that offers
students a comprehensive look at the elements of a hybrid course.
-
"'Hybrid' Teaching
Seeks to End the Divide Between Traditional and Online Instruction."
Article by Jeffrey R. Young in the Chronicle of Higher Education, 3/22/02,
examining both the theory of the blended course concept and examples at
several institutions around the country.
-
Program in Course Redesign (PCR). 1999-2002 collaboration of 30
institutions, funded by the
Pew Foundation,
to demonstrate how to redesign their instructional approaches using
technology to achieve cost savings and quality enhancements. Results led to
increased interest in hybrid course creation, and the PCR was followed by a
three-year,
FIPSE-funded
initiative, The Roadmap to
Redesign (R2R), to spread the PCR's ideas and practices. More
information about the work of these programs is at the
Center for Academic Transformation
Website.
- Readings on Blended Learning. Both the
University of Milwaukee
(WI) and the
University of North Texas provide Websites with links to excellent
sources of information, some older than those listed in this BEEP, on both
background and examples of hybrid courses.
-
"Rethinking Space and Time: The Role of Internet Technology in a Large
Lecture Course." Article by Diane Harley, Jonathan Henke, and
Michael W. Maher in Innovate (1:1), October/November 2004. Provides and
interprets the results of a study at the University of California that
compared traditional and technology-enhanced versions of an undergraduate
chemistry course over a two-year span. Stresses the benefits of online
technology for large lecture classes. (Requires free registration to read
the complete article.)
-
"Teaching
and Learning in a Hybrid World: An Interview with Carol Twigg."
Interview by Susan Walsh Veronikas and Michael F. Shaughnessy in Educause
Review (39:4), July/August 2004, with Dr. Carol Twigg, Executive Director of
the Center for Academic Transformation,
about learning objects; online standards and the educational market; and
more.
-
"Who We
Really Are." Recent interview by Mary Grush in Campus Technology,
January 2005, with Ron Bleed, IT Vice Chancellor for Maricopa Community
Colleges, in which he discusses the colleges' involvement in hybrid courses.
Dr. Bleed is the author of a seminal piece,
"A Hybrid
Campus for the New Millennium," printed in Educause Review (36:1),
January/February, 2001.
Examples
BEEP's Best Bets
Assessment and Evaluation
Assistive Technologies
Innovative Technologies
-
"Computers Obeying Brain Signals." Associated Press release by Malcolm
Ritter, 4/4/05, announcing some dramatic new uses of electrical brain
signals that allow paralyzed people to change TV channels, surf the net,
write letters to friends, and steer a small robot along the floor.
-
Cell Phone with Built-in Projector. Announcement, 3/24/05, of a new cell
phone by the Siemens company that makes it possible to project a complete
keypad or display onto a surface. With a special pen, users can write on the
virtual keypad and also operate the phone's functions.
-
"MIT Team Creating $100 Laptops." Synopsis of wire service reports in
eSchool News Online, 3/14/05, about MIT's plan to design and mass-produce
basic, durable, laptops costing $100 or less for use by children worldwide,
including U. S. students.
The contents of BEEP were developed under a grant from the U. S. Department of Education (DOE). However, those contents do not necessarily represent the policy of the DOE, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government.
|
|