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Aligning the Key D imensions of Online Learning Environments to Enable Student Success

Aligning the Key D imensions of Online Learning Environments to Enable Student Success. Dr Darien Rossiter and Janet Baker. Third international conference e-Learning and distance learning. Australian Higher Education Key Features. Government Led Sector Reform -

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Aligning the Key D imensions of Online Learning Environments to Enable Student Success

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  1. Aligning the Key Dimensions of Online Learning Environments to Enable Student Success Dr Darien Rossiter and Janet Baker Third international conference e-Learning and distance learning

  2. Australian Higher Education Key Features • Government Led Sector Reform - • improve completion rates – 2012 - 36.8% of 25-40 year olds with bachelor or higher degree (DIIRSTE) • increase in participation from low SES & indigenous students • Quality – establish TEQSA, Higher Education Quality Standards • Increase in diversity of student population - led to increase in need for student support • Growth in online education (18.6% 2008 – 2013) (Ibis World)

  3. Australian Higher Education Sector

  4. Australian Government Quality Agenda • Tertiary Education Quality & Standards Agency: Regulatory “watchdog” • Higher Education Standards Panel: • Standards Framework • Provider Standards, Qualification Standards, Teaching and Learning Standards, Information Standards and Research Standards • Australian Qualifications Framework Council

  5. Diversity of the Online Student Cohort • Professionals wishing to upgrade skills; • Career changers who take up study for entry into a different profession; • Mature-aged students who take up units for personal interest; • International students of a language background other than English (LBOTE); • Students with health issues or special needs • Students with carer responsibilities • Traditional school leavers • Non-traditional students and ‘At-risk’ students

  6. Reasons for Studying Online • Source: OUA Student Survey 2011

  7. Student Feedback Best and worst things about being an online learner OUA, Griffith University, University of South Australia, Curtin University Study 2011-2012

  8. What is Student Success and Who Determines it? Government The Student Employers Academic Staff University Senior Managers Industry

  9. What is Student Success? • Measures of Success • Completion • Student retention and attrition • Progression • Engagement • Grades and Assessment • Student Satisfaction

  10. Grades and Assessment Students feedback on the influence of grades Well, for someone who was a C grade student in school I’ve got five passes, two credits and a distinction … I never, I never considered ever getting a distinction ... (OUA Interview) Well, I guess really the most exciting thing for me has been my distinction in every subject, getting quite good results really in the end, I think really that would be it. (OUA Interview) My positives, you know I just, I think really I was daunted, halfway in you know, I sort of realised, “I can do this”, with my results I got two distinctions with a credit . (UOW Interview) University of Wollongong /OUA Study on Student Engagement 2012

  11. Enabling Student Success • Institutional strategies for engagement and motivation • Effective student support and interventions

  12. What is Student Engagement? Student engagement is concerned with the interaction between the time, effort and other relevant resources invested by both students and their institutions intended to optimise the student experience and enhance the learning outcomes and development of students and the performance, and reputation of the institution. (Trowler, 2010)

  13. Effective Student Engagement Data from the AUSSE surveys tell us: • Engagement with the learning community is closely linked with student satisfaction and success Student engagement in educationally purposeful activities is positively related to academic outcomes. (Kuh et al., 2008).

  14. Is Online Learning a Barrier to Effective Engagement? • AUSSE Briefing (August 2008) indicates that online learners are not necessarily less engaged with their learning and their institution than the on-campus students • Building student identity & sense of belonging – decrease alienation – a stranger in a foreign land (Mann, 2001)

  15. Dimensions of Online Learning • Course design and development • Student support • Staff professional development • Learning technologies

  16. Course Design and Development • Personalisation • Adaptive Learning • Authentic Learning • Collaborative Learning • Supported Learning

  17. Learning, Teaching and Assessment Model OUA Model

  18. Student Support • Academic study skills • Counselling • Preparatory and language assistance units • Services for students with disabilities and special needs • Online resources • Social support • Careers advice

  19. Value of Support Mechanisms Support is a condition that promotes student retention. Research points to several types of support that promote retention, in particular academic and social support. (Tinto, 2009). The most important criterion for staying in college is the student’s social support network. (Skahill, 2002/2003) For non-traditional students - importance of: validation, when faculty, students, friends, parents and spouses made an effort to acknowledge these students and what they were trying to achieve. (Rendon,1998) compensatory effect of student engagement for students who are academically unprepared or first in their families to go to college. (Kuh et al., 2008)

  20. Student Engagement Lifecycle Career Advice and Information PREP units, Counselling and Disability Services Counselling services and Academic support and Student Success Hub Proactive intervention emails OUA Model

  21. Staff Professional Development

  22. Learning Technologies Framework • Learning Management Systems (and beyond) • Mobile Technologies • Telepresence/ Simulation • Web 2.0 • Analytics and Assessment Tools

  23. Quality Online Learning Environment Aligning all components for student success • Student support • Staff professional development • Learning technologies • Framework for course design

  24. Importance of Alignment “All components in the system address the same agenda and support each other. The students are ‘entrapped’ in this web of consistency, optimising the likelihood that they will engage the appropriate learning activities.” (Biggs, 2012)

  25. Data Analytics Potential Data sources • Demographic & geographic • Survey and eDM • Study load • Academic background • Student service usage (study skills, student coaching) • Academic performance model, segmentation, intervention • LMS usage (eg. GA & analytics tools in PREP) • Interactions with other students (discussion forum)

  26. Data Analytics Potential Data sources • Demographic & geographic • Survey and eDM • Study load • Academic background • Student service usage (study skills, student coaching) • Academic performance model, segmentation, intervention • LMS usage (eg. GA & analytics tools in PREP) • Interactions with other students (discussion forum) What data is most useful ?

  27. What is Learning Analytics? “Learning analytics (LA) is the measurement, collection, analysis and reporting of data about learners and their contexts, for purposes of understanding and optimising learning and the environment in which it occurs. Learning analytics are largely concerned with improving learner success.” SOLAR, 2011, Open Learning Analytics: An Integrated and Modularized Platform

  28. How Can Learning Analytics Support Student Success? • Real time information to student and teacher on engagement and interactions • Insights that are meaningful and actionable • “Nudge analytics” – timely interventions to keep students moving in the right direction • Improve course design • Predictive modeling

  29. To Conclude... Student success does not arise by chance. It is the result of an intentional, structured, and proactive set of strategies that are coherent and systematic in nature and carefully aligned to the same goal. (Tinto, 2009)

  30. Thank You Questions

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