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
|
|
E-Learning Evaluation: Standards and Procedures
"Most institutions...are creating
or adopting quality statements, standards,
and criteria regarding their niche of the 'eLearning enterprise.'"
(Source: Jia Frydenberg, International
Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning,
October 2002)
Formal e-learning assessment/evaluation has come a long way since
BEEP first addressed the subject in Evaluating
Quality and Effectiveness of E-Courses, Issue 25, October
2002. While most of the sources assembled there are still valid,
this issue adds others created and/or discovered since then. Also,
don't overlook BEEP's Best Bets at the end - these timely tidbits
cover various facets of e-learning.
General Evaluation
- Best
Practices for Electronically Offered Degree and Certificate
Programs. 2000 statement of commitment by the eight U. S.
regional accrediting commissions to a collection of mutually
agreed-upon principles of best practice, with a link to same.
These principles have formed the foundation for many of the
standards since developed for e-learning evaluation.
- Five
Pillars of Quality Online Education. Sloan Consortium Report
to the Nation by George Lorenzo and Janet Moore, November 2002.
The pillars identified include learning effectiveness, student
satisfaction, faculty satisfaction, cost effectiveness, and
completely barrier-free access.
- ODL QC Standards. Standards
developed by the Open and Distance Learning
Quality Control Council (UK) that cover course objectives,
outcomes and content; publicity and recruitment; admission procedures;
learning support; accreditation; and more.
- "Quality Standards
in eLearning: A Matrix of Analysis." Article by Jia Frydenberg,
University of California, In International Review of Research
in Open and Distance Learning, October 2002. Summary of
published quality standards in the United States, organized
into a nine-cell matrix that includes executive commitment;
technological infrastructure; student services; design and development;
instruction and instructor services; program delivery; financial
health; regulatory and legal requirements; and program evaluation.
Evaluation of Faculty Performance
- "Best
Practices for Administrative Evaluation of Online Faculty."
Article by Thomas J. Tobin, Southern Illinois University, in
the Online Journal of the Distance Learning Association
(7:2), Summer 2004. Ideas on how to evaluate materials and teaching
in online courses, including technological considerations and
national standards, rubrics and benchmarks. Appendix contains
a checklist for online interactive learning (COIL).
- Course Peer Review
Process. Weber State University (UT). Explanation of the
university's faculty review process by teams that include technical
support staff and other online instructors.
- From the Course Standards
Foothills to Peer Review Mountain and Beyond. Presentation
by Mary Nunaley, Skip Sparkman and David Warner at the Mid-South
Instructional Technology Conference, March 30-April 1, 2003.
Discussion of a faculty peer review process that affords opportunities
for instructional development, since reviews anticipate that
faculty learn from evaluation both of and by colleagues. Includes
a peer review analysis form.
- Guiding
Principles for Faculty in Distance Learning. Indiana Partnership
for Statewide Education (IPSE). Principles which define good
instructional practice in distance learning and offer a benchmark
for designing, developing, delivering and assessing e-courses
and programs.
- Seven Principles
of Effective Teaching: A Practical Lens for Evaluating Online
Courses. Michigan Virtual University. Website that offers
a checklist for judging the quality of the instructional piece
of online course delivery. Principles include effective student-faculty
contact, cooperation among students, active learning, prompt
feedback, time on task, high expectations, and respect for diversity
in learning styles.
Course Content Review
- Online
Course Assessment Process. Prince Georges Community College
(MD). Detailed plan for reviews of two phases, one before the
course is first offered, one after two semesters.
- Online Design Checklist.
Florida Gulf Coast University. Simple tool that covers five
segments for course development: audience analysis; course goals/objectives;
instructional activities; student and course evaluation; and
teaching strategies.
- Online Standards
for Development. Weber State University (UT). Eight standards
of evaluation applicable to online and hybrid courses that cover
home page, course syllabus, orientation, interactive learning
community, timely feedback, appropriate electronic media, course
equivalence, and quality product.
Students' Assessment of Their E-Learning Experiences
- FAST - Free Assessment Summary Tool. Free
online survey tool maintained by Mount Royal College (Canada),
which allows instructors to develop an anonymous survey that
automatically summarizes students' impressions of a course and/or
teacher.
- "Reliability
and Validity of a Student Scale for Assessing the Quality of
Internet Based Distance Learning." Article by Craig L. Scanlan,
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, in the Online
Journal of the Distance Learning Association (6:3), Fall
2003. Example of how one institution developed a student assessment
tool by reviewing national benchmarks for e-learning excellence,
then translating them into questionnaire statements.
- Student Assessment
of Learning Gains (SALG). Free Website funded by Exxon and
the National Science Foundation to help college-level instructors
use and modify the SALG provided, as well as review and download
a statistical analysis of student responses.
BEEP's Best Bets
E-Learning Administration
- "Online Course Development:
What Does It Cost?" Article by Judith Boettcher in Syllabus
(17:12), July/August 2004, that proposes a few guidelines for
predicting the costs involved in the design and development
of online courses.
- Penn State World Campus Faculty Helps
Dismantle Barriers to Online Teaching. Announcement in Penn
State Live, July 15, 2004, of award-winning research at
the Penn State World Campus which determined, contrary to popular
belief, that the time required for teaching an online course
is less than that of one in a face-to-face environment.
- "Universities to
Release Free Course-Management Software." Article by Jeffrey
R. Young in The Chronicle of Higher Education, July
15, 2004, on the release of a free course-management software
by the Sakai Project. A joint venture of four major universities,
it will include the complete source code, so that institutions
can customize and enhance the program.
Innovative Technologies
- "Students
Boot Up High Tech 'Tablets.'" Article by David Dodds in
the Grand Forks Herald, 5/12/04, about the decision
of Mayville State University (ND) to equip every full-time student
with a new Gateway Tablet PC. Likewise, Duke University
(NC) will give each freshman an iPOD.
- "Virtually Perfect."
Article by Joseph C. Panettieri in University Business,
June 2004, about innovative new ways to capture, store, and
retrieve content for online courses.
Student Services
- "Colleges
Reach Out Via Instant Messaging." Article by Jen Haberkorn
in The Washington Times, June 24, 2004, explaining
the policy at Boston University of having its admission counselors
communicate via instant messaging with prospective students.
- Hello, You've
Got Laundry. Taking online student services to a new level,
Carnegie Mellon University (PA) offers a Web-based system that
emails dorm students when their laundry is done.
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.
|
|