Looking back at my earlier blog post and considering what I read in the articles, there are a few things that- although not extremely surprising to me- were things that got me thinking about how much we really understand about virtual schooling.
The most unexpected thing I
learned was from Barbour (2009). He
reveals that there are significant inadequacies in our understanding of the
efficacy of virtual schooling, because many of the best-known studies (such as
those of Marc Prensky) are methodologically flawed by small sample size or
demographically predetermined by a prejudicial selection method. Studies are also handicapped by their
limitations in following the progress of all students; students who drop out of
a course are often excluded from the data, and this artificially inflates
graduation rates and final grades. Barbour
indicates that in the Florida Virtual School, between 25% and 50% of students
dropped out of the course, which means that their scores do not figure into the
final analysis. Further, in Gemin &
Pape’s 2016 Keeping Pace with K12 Online
Learning report, it indicated that only 68.5% of students received a grade
of D or higher, while the other 31.5% either failed or did not receive a final
grade. I didn’t have any preexisting
assumptions about achievement or graduation rates for students of virtual
schools, but this does cause me to regard claims on this subject with some skepticism.
I was intrigued to find that
most students enrolled in virtual classes only take 1 or 2 at a time. Their other classes are held at a traditional
brick-and-mortar school. In my earlier
post I had assumed that if a student were enrolled in a “virtual school,” then
she was a full-time student. But I can
see that this does not have to be the case.
For instance, Gemin & Pape’s virtual schooling report indicated that
most students took an average of about 2 online classes (but it differs by
state, with North Carolina at 3.18 enrollments per student and Iowa at only
1.13, with Michigan near the average at 1.69 enrollments per student). This report also points out that many enrollments
are for credit recovery, so these students may simply be taking a single
virtual course in order to get credit and graduate. They are not necessarily getting all of their
schooling online. Barbour also notes that
in 2007 the most frequently enrolled virtual courses were Algebra I and Algebra
II, classes that are often taken online as credit recovery opportunities. This shifts my view of the virtually-schooled
student as being supplemented by
online learning, rather than having it supplant on-site education.
On a small note, I was a little
confused by the relationship between “vendors,” “suppliers,” teachers, and schools
in the 2016 report. What was
specifically surprising was that I kept stumbling upon phrases such as “The
supplier, offering the online course and perhaps the teacher,” and “courses
that include the online teacher,” and other such syntactically puzzling
phraseology. It seems like sometimes the
vendor provides the teacher and sometimes not.
I even encountered the somehow startling statement that suppliers are “not
responsible for a student’s academic activity and performance and are not
authorized to do so. As such, suppliers
do not own the transcript of a student, administer state assessments, assign
grade levels, or offer diplomas.” I
guess the vendors and suppliers are more just providing the materials, not doing
what I would consider actual teaching. I
had never really thought about the nuanced relationship between these different
actors in virtual schooling.
After reading through iNACOL’s Top Ten Myths about Virtual Schools, I
don’t think I fell into any of these myths when describing what I thought
virtual schooling was. Maybe the closest
I came to was myth 4: “Online students are isolated and therefore will be socially
disadvantaged.” I didn’t imply that
students are isolated or social disadvantaged while taking virtual classes, but
I did suggest that perhaps students with severe social anxiety may benefit from
being away from the social politics and relational stresses inherent in a
brick-and-mortar school. Especially
based on my experiences so far with IT6140 and IT6230, I would not agree with
myth 3 anyway: “Online courses lack interaction.” This is clearly a mischaracterization of
virtual schooling promulgated by people who are probably ignorant of the
experience. I think the same thing about
myth 7: “Online course [sic] are easier for students than regular courses.” Anyone who has taken an online course can
tell you that they are by no means easier than a traditional course. Obviously they are different, but I don’t
think that a course’s difficulty can be predicted based on whether it is
virtual or traditional.
Some of my thoughts from the earlier post were accurate. I figured
that a virtual class could involve synchronous and asynchronous work, and
Barbour points out that this is true, although he suggests that often virtual
educators are better at synchronous teaching, because it is more congruent with
the style of teaching with which they are probably most familiar. I also assumed that a good virtual class would
have a variety of modes of learning, from group work, to individual
assignments, to interactive resources and engaging digital media. Although it doesn’t seem that this was
heavily addressed in any of the sources, I think the glancing references made
about virtual course quality support this view.
Barbour, M. K. (2009). Today's student and virtual
schooling: The reality, the challenges, the promise. Journal
of Distance Learning, 13(1),
5-25.
Gemin, B., & Pape, L. (2017). Keeping
Pace with K-12 Digital Learning: 2016 (13th ed.). Durango, CO:
Evergreen Education Group.
iNACOL. (no
date). “Top ten myths about virtual
schools.” North American Council for
Online Learning. www.nacol.org


Paragraph three you start by referring to it as a "small note," but there should be a massive discussion about who is pushing for online schooling. There are two types of products in the world: those that fill a need and those that create one. I don't have enough experience to tell you which company is doing which, but to believe everyone is altruistic is foolish. I would guess that the online world is very similar to the charter school concept spanning from amazingly concerned about a student's future to downright money grabbing. Think about our standardized testing. We have it because someone convinced state and national government that we needed one, and of course somehow we aren't capable of creating one, so we have to buy theirs. Oh, and then guess what, they also happen to sell material to help students get ready to take the test they just sold to their state. I feel like online learning can be equally fishy.
ReplyDeleteYou mention how often it is used in credit recovery, which is how my district uses most online learning. HOW STUPID ARE WE AS A NATION!!! We take the kids who struggled in a traditional classroom and stick them in front of a computer with incredibly low expectations and interaction to "pass" the class they failed. These are the students who need intervention, not isolation. I'd be perfectly happy if my district had the AP Calc students work in on online setting with a teacher there to help fill in gaps. Those are the motivated students. Those are the students already capable of tackling something that takes focus and fortitude. Those are the students who can be trusted to work.
There are certainly valid reasons for online learning, and I love it as an adult, but I just don't see it ever becoming the right choice for public education as a whole.
I agree with the last part of your comment, and I am equally suspicious of any vendor claiming that their materials fill a need when they might just be creating one. One of the most memorable things I ever heard about marketing was from the show Mad Men, in which Don Draper (an advertising consultant) is criticized by a hipster. The hipster says something like, "You create need. You make people look at their lives and say, 'My God, I never realized I needed that.' You disgust me." Sometimes I think the creators of educational materials- especially textbook publishers- are guilty of this sin.
DeleteI guess as far as your middle comment, I have a knee-jerk response- I'd be willing to give students a chance to reclaim lost credit online for this reason: Clearly the classroom environment was not conducive to their success (for whatever reason), so why not give them the opportunity to prove they learned the material in a different modality, vis-a-vis online? It is certainly not by default "better" than a classroom education, but the change in scenery CAN be beneficial to some students, even at-risk ones. Even Kevin in Dr. Siko's case study was able to pass the class (though his notion of success was passing while doing as little as he could). Just throwing my thoughts out there. I just worry about the self-fulfilling prophesy of saying "Oh, these kids are really smart so they'll do great independently. But this kid can't be trusted so I'm going to spoon-feed him."
Mark makes an excellent point. Online classes should not be utilized as a crutch to help students pass a class by offering lower standards and expectations. Instead, the online course should offer equally challenging and rigorous content for a student to confront. Otherwise, online learning becomes a pass for students to escape a real education. Online learning should supplement a quality education, not lower the standards for education.
DeleteTo address the part about credit recovery. I don't believe that an online credit recovery class should be given less expectation to allow students to skate by. Also, I believe that students have difficulty with courses for several reasons. Maybe they have family problems or issues getting to school. Perhaps using an online medium is more engaging to the student. As long as the standards are the same as the traditional class it shouldn't matter how a student gets the credit for the course.
DeleteYes, you'll notice that I don't think that students working for credit recovery should be given classes that are somehow easier or have lower standards. Rather, I see it as acceptable to allow access with a different modality of learning in order to give that student a new opportunity to prove he's learned the material.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteSpot. On. Creating the market is the result of policies affecting public education as a whole. Decimate the system, create a sense of urgency around the problem, then create free-market mechanisms to 'solve' the problem. This goes beyond educational technology and online learning and to "A Nation At Risk" and the charter/voucher movement (along with systemic racism in education in urban areas).
ReplyDelete