nettimes_roving_reporter on Thu, 23 Sep 1999 01:16:53 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> Study Finds Problems With Web Class |
<http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/09/cyber/education/22education.html> September 22, 1999 By PAMELA MENDELS Bio Study Finds Problems With Web Class The online field trip to a virtual campus was marred by confusion. The assignments on the class Web site left students bewildered. The flood of messages to the class e-mail discussion list left many recipients feeling inundated. Technical problems interfered with work. The result for the graduate students who enrolled in B555, the fictitious name of a real Web-based course offered by a university two years ago, could be summarized in one word: frustration. And that, say two researchers who have written a case study about the class, points to a need for a serious examination of what they call a taboo subject in academia: the problems with Web-based distance education. Rob Kling, a professor at Indiana University in Bloomington and the study's co-author said "there are a lot of good potentials" for technology in education. But, he added, "There are a lot of limitations and, further, it is neither simple nor cheap." These are fighting words for techno-enthusiasts extolling the possibilities of new media and education. But they cannot be dismissed as coming from Luddites suspicious of technological innovation. Kling is a prominent professor of information systems and information science as well as a professor of computer science. His co-author and the study's investigator, Noriko Hara, is a graduate student interested in instructional uses of technology. That may be the reason their paper, a working draft now being revised, is beginning to attract attention. Hara has received about 60 requests for copies of it, since word of the paper began circulating on education-related e-mail lists in August. And both she and Kling have been asked to present the paper at a conference next month on new media and learning. William H. Dutton, a professor at the University of Southern California and one of the conference organizers, invited them because, he says, the often boosterish attitude toward Web-based education stands in marked contrast to the paucity of research into students' reactions to it. "There is a great deal of enthusiasm, but perhaps less of a critical perspective than there should be," he said. The study in question is a limited one. The report looks at just one class -- and a small one at that -- so it is not a survey of distance education courses as a whole, and few if any generalizations can be drawn from it. But, Dutton said, such case studies are instructive because they raise questions that can prompt further research. He believes the findings will resonate with many people who have tried to teach online. "It forces people to deal with very real issues about the usability of current systems," he said. B555 was offered by what the authors describe as a "major university" in fall, 1997. The study offers few identifying details, because the authors promised confidentiality to the students and their instructor. But this much is known. The subject of the class involved the use of technology for teaching languages. Eight masters' degree students enrolled initially: five campus students and three off-campus students. Two of the long-distance students dropped the class because of problems with the technology. The instructor, who was foreign-born, was a Ph.D. candidate who was asked to teach the course after its designer, a faculty member in her program, fell ill.. The instructor had never taught a distance education course. She had, however, taken the class herself and had had a hand in the design of the B555 Web site. The class never met face-to-face, but was conducted largely through e-mail discussion and assignments posted on a Web site. Hara had begun the study expecting to hear a lot of enthusiasm for it. Instead, she said, she found frustration far beyond what one would expect in a small class. The amount of e-mail traffic generated by the class was one source of complaints, Hara found. In one typical week, for example, students received 35 messages about the class, which at the time they considered too cumbersome. One student quoted in the study commented that "just talking in conversation would be so much easier." The students were not the only ones who felt the e-mail load was too great. "The instructor also commented that at the beginning of the semester he was spending all day doing nothing but reading and responding to e-mail messages," the study says. "Later in the semester, she was able to reduce the workload, but still spent a large chunk of time on this course." Students were also frustrated by the potential for misunderstanding inherent in electronic communication. In one online chat session during a "virtual" field trip to a community Web site, a student wrote in a chat that she liked "calling rows," prompting another student to tell Hara that she assumed her classmate meant "calling role." "Sometimes it's confusing, the teacher and half the students are non-native speakers," the second student complained. Confusion cropped up in other ways on the trip. One student failed to master commands necessary to make her words appear on the screen during the chat, despite having practiced using the technology. Another found the text conversation scrolled too quickly for her to absorb -- and then disappeared. Over the course of the semester, students became flustered because they did not receive frequent or detailed enough responses by e-mail from their instructor. "One of the problems is that I'd like to have feedback. A kind of constant feedback," another student said. Others failed to grasp what the teacher expected when she posted assignments. "I usually don't understand what she wants, either e-mail or from the Web site," one student told Hara. Still another student was disoriented by the lack of visual cues that students receive from teachers in a classroom. He complained to Hara that he had received little response from the instructor about his contributions to the class e-mail discussion, and didn't know how to interpret this. In a traditional setting, he said, "You can tell from the classroom what the professor thinks about you from the body language and the way they talk." Some people who have read the paper, however, think it unfairly criticizes Web courses. "I thought overall this was condemning distance learning in ways that distance learning does not deserve to be condemned," said Carrie Heeter, a professor of telecommunication at Michigan State University. For example, she believes much of the frustration in the class stemmed from human rather than technical problems. One example was the time the teacher failed to send out assignments according to her usual schedule. "That doesn't have to do with an online course. That's a professor not doing what they say they would," Heeter said. In addition, she said, she believes some of the problems in the class could have been handled through technological tweaking. Bulletin boards devoted to specific class topics, for example, might have proved a more manageable form of discussion than e-mail lists. Kling responds that to blame human or other problems for the frustration felt by the online students is to beg the question of what happens when universities transfer courses to the Web. There will always be bad teachers and institutional problems such as a graduate student being asked to teach a course he or she has not drawn up, Kling said. The question is, what happens when inexperienced teachers teach online? However, Kling said the next version of the paper will make clear that the course instructor had a reputation for being a good classroom teacher. The problem, apparently, was that she had failed to receive adequate orientation in Web pedagogy. Kling said if university administrators are going to push distance education, they must begin to recognize that teaching online is not the same as teaching in a classroom. Both teachers and students need to understand this and be better prepared to handle the differences, he said. Kling believes that researchers have so far overlooked the thorny details of what is involved with online pedagogy, while extolling the educational potential of technology. "The professional literature and even the scholarly literature about activities related to the use of computer networks tend to be upbeat, optimistic and at times even utopian," he said. He also noted that to look at the literature on the subject, one would not have "a clue that issues of the kinds we identified could happen, let alone be thought through and engaged." Walter S. Baer, a senior policy analyst at the Rand Corp. who has written about the Internet and technology, agrees. He says the study is useful in pointing out problems that are hardly unique to B555. "I think similar frustrations are arising in many institutions around the country," he said. Copyright 1999 The New York Times Company # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net