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Spring 2001
Volume 00, Number 2
Newsletter on Philosophy and Computers
TEACHING
IN CYBERSPACE
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“Hybrid”
Courses: The Best of Both Worlds
Julie
Van Camp
California
State University, Long Beach
http://www.csulb.edu/~jvancamp
jvancamp@csulb.edu
For all the hype about "distance-learning," nothing can replace
in-person classes with dialogue, discussion, and eye-contact with
students. After one experiment with a course taught entirely on
the Internet in spring 1998 (see "Teaching Philosophy of Art On-Line,"
American Philosophical Association Newsletter on Philosophy and
Computers, 98:1 [Fall 1998], 30-32), I concluded that I needed to
reconnect with my students, while still taking advantage of Internet
technologies.
Unfortunately, the model most of us have been using
for "teaching-with-technology"-a traditional in-class format, supplemented
with various on-line activities-presents its own problems. Offering
regular courses with on-line add-ons-a threaded discussion group,
assignments for finding and using materials on the Web, virtual
office hours in a chatroom, e-mail communication - results in an
overload of work and complaints from students that they now have
a class-and-a-half.
We all like to think our courses are so interesting
and exciting that students will not mind devoting many extra hours
each week to our brilliant and challenging assignments. But the
reality of student lives today, with heavy courseloads and part-time
jobs to pay expenses, means that every minute counts in their lives.
Their complaints about piling on too much extra work outside class
must be taken seriously.
A reasonable guideline for the amount of work in a
course is the traditional rule-of-thumb, viz., for every one hour
in classroom, a student should spend two hours in study, preparation,
writing papers, and so on. Taking an existing course that meets
this model and adding a host of on-line activities thus, admittedly,
far exceeds this workload.
A solution with great promise is the so-called "hybrid"
course, which expressly blends both in-person class meetings (although
fewer than a traditional course) and heavy on-line use. The key
to designing an appropriate course and to winning support from academic
administrators is to re-think the student workload using a model
already accepted on campus, such as the two-for-one rule. Instead
of measuring academic units in the antiquated model of "seat time"
(e.g., a three-credit course requires three hours in a seat in a
classroom), instructors and administrators should think in terms
of the overall expectations each week for a course, both in-person
classes and time outside of the classroom.
I initially saw the potential for a new approach to
measuring student workload/credit when my campus ran workshops for
the first group of faculty who would use CourseInfo by Blackboard,
(see http://www.blackboard.com -ed.)
which our campus implemented in fall of 1999. High-ranking administrators
at those workshops stressed that it would be acceptable to skip
an in-person meeting for a class and substitute an on-line activity,
such as a chatroom or a threaded discussion group. Administrators,
in their eagerness to encourage distance-learning, had already sent
out the word that they wanted to break the lock of the so-called
"seat-time-credit-hours" on our campus. Their stress on flexibility
with CourseInfo was consistent with earlier signals.
Implementation of this new model can take various forms.
My first venture, fall of 1999, was a course called "Law, Philosophy,
and the Humanities," an interdisciplinary course for 60 upper-division
students and MA students, targetted to philosophy majors interested
in philosophy of law and pre-law students from various majors. An
express goal of the course was to use on-line technologies they
would likely encounter in the next year or two in law school or
graduate school. Although scheduled to meet twice a week, for 75-minute
classes, the Thursday class meeting was often cancelled so they
could substitute on-line work beyond the normal course syllabus.
For example, for a four-week period, they were required
to participate in a threaded discussion group, with points assigned
according to substantive responses to the reading assignments and
to comments from other students. They did not have to make their
contributions during the Thursday meeting time, but could participate
anytime from Tuesday night until the following Monday night. They
were told to log into the group several times to see how the discussion
was going and to respond to follow-up comments on threads of interest.
As the semester progressed, I was struck by how often
our classroom sat empty during the class period. Good rooms at good
scheduling times are in great demand on our campus, and I thought
the empty room was a huge waste. I asked some of our academic administrators
if we might try in a future semester having two instructors share
a room and keep the classrooms in full use, and they happily agreed.
We implemented this approach for a course in fall 1999. I shared
a large lecture room, holding 117 students and equipped with the
best technology on campus (built-in projector for my laptop, network
connection, etc.). My course on "Liberty and Justice: Race, Ethnicity,
and Gender in American Law" filled the room, as it had become popular
with pre-law students around campus and also met several upper-division
General Education requirements. I took the room on Tuesday for 75
minutes and a colleague in another department took the room on Thursday
for his course in Chicano Studies. For the rest of the week, we
each planned a range of heavy on-line usage so that students were
getting the expected nine hours of work each week for the three-unit
course.
Administrators loved our shared classroom use. In effect,
we doubled the capacity of the room without violating fire rules.
Large, well-equipped lecture rooms in "prime time" are scarce on
our campus, as the state deals with burgeoning enrollments from
Tidal Wave II (see http://www.tidalwave2.org -ed.)
Students also liked the flexibility. The on-line work
could be completed at any time during the week, but they could also
do it in campus labs if they choose during the class period when
they were not meeting in person.
My challenge was coming up with serious on-line work
that I could justify as a substitute for the missing in-person class
period. I offered students a choice of three activities for our
"virtual classroom" each week, with up to four points available.
The first option was participation in a threaded discussion group
on the readings from the most recent in-person class meeting. To
get the maximum points, students had to respond substantively to
all of the readings, as well as other student comments.
The second option was a four-question on-line quiz,
timed for one-hour, on the readings from the previous class. CourseInfo
automatically graded these and posted the points on the on-line
Gradebook, a time-saver for me. Although CourseInfo gave me the
option of letting students immediately know the right answer, I
turned off that feature, as students were taking the quiz any time
from Tuesday evening through Monday night. After the quiz was no
longer available, I posted the correct answers on the CourseInfo
site.
The third option was a written case brief on one of the cases we
would be discussing at the following class, sent to me electronically
(either as an e-mail attachment or in the CourseInfo DropBox).
I had a good "baseline" for the amount of work in this
course, as I had taught it in a traditional format the previous
year. My reading list was essentially unchanged. I required the
same short paper, mid-term essay exam, and final essay exam as I
had before. The only real difference was the substitution of "virtual
classroom" activities for the second class meeting each week.
To do a good job and get the maximum points on "virtual
classroom," students needed to spend at least two hours each week,
which satisfied my interest in substituting a demanding requirement
for the missing class meeting. Two of the assignments required considerable
writing each week and the third, the quiz, required a close reading
of the assigned articles. As we all know, weekly writing and/or
close reading of the material is not an activity in which students
necessarily engage when they simply show up for an in-person class
and absorb whatever is being said. Pedagogically, the course was
thus more demanding and worthwhile than the traditional course had
been.
One small technical problem was easily solved. The
final exam schedule on our campus matches class times, but the room
was not big enough for both courses to take an in-person exam at
the same time. The Chicano Studies course took the classroom, and
I used a timed on-line final exam, which worked well. At the designated
start time, my students were told to be at a computer, logged into
the internet (whether a campus lab, at home, or at work). I posted
the exam question on the CourseInfo site at the exam start time.
To be safe, I also sent it out on the e-mail list-serv on CourseInfo,
so they would have it that way as well. The exam was an open-book
exam, due two hours later through electronic submission (e-mail
attachment or CourseInfo Dropbox). With the date stamp on submission,
I knew the exam had been submitted on time, two hours after the
exam started.
Hybrid classes in shared classrooms solve multiple
problems for the instructor and the campus. It gives us the flexibility
to moderate workload for students to reasonable expectations, taking
into account both in-person meetings and on-line work. For campuses
short on classrooms, our shared room doubled the enrollment in that
time slot in the schedule.
Although my course was taught on CourseInfo, which
has access restricted to registered students, I have an "old-fashioned"
web page open to all with the Syllabus and Course Requirements,
showing the "Virtual Classroom" assignments and other course elements:
http://www.csulb.edu/~jvancamp/451/.
I cannot imagine teaching a course entirely on the
Internet again, after having tried it once. But I expect to regularly
offer hybrid courses in shared rooms - for me, this is the best
of both worlds and an approach I heartily recommend.
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