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Study: Students want more online learning
Funding shortages, lack of teacher preparation mean schools offer less online learning than students desire, this research suggests

 

Primary Topic Channel:  NECC , Virtual schooling / Distance Learning

 

Online learning is one option that students really want.

Despite a growing interest in online learning among students, the availability of online classes in K-12 schools and districts hasn't kept pace with the demand, according to a new report from Project Tomorrow and Blackboard Inc.

According to the report, more than 40 percent of sixth through 12th graders have researched or demonstrated interest in taking a course online, but only 10 percent have actually taken an online course through their school. Meanwhile, 7 percent of middle school students and 4 percent of high school students instead have pursued opportunities outside their school to take online courses--underscoring the disconnect between the supply and demand for online learning in today's schools.

What's more, a majority of school principals, 58 percent, say the online classes currently offered in their districts are primarily for teachers; just 31 percent say the classes are primarily for students. Additionally, while a third of teachers have taken an online course for professional development--a 57-percent increase from 2007--only 3 percent of teachers say they've taught a class online, a number that has not changed in three years. Just 13 percent of teachers say they're interested in teaching online, a considerable mismatch with the growing student desire to learn online.

The findings are included in the report "Learning in the 21st Century: 2009 Trends Update," which offers a further analysis of data from Project Tomorrow's Speak Up initiative, an annual survey that has collected and reported on the views of more than 335,000 K-12 students, parents, and educators in the United States about online education and 21st-century learning.

"While many of our nation's K-12 schools clearly recognize the advantages of online learning and instruction in teacher professional development, there remains a lag in utilizing this technology for student achievement," said Julie Evans, CEO of Project Tomorrow. "Educators must embrace these emerging technologies to enhance student learning and fully prepare today's students for future success."

School administrators cited funding and teacher preparation as key barriers to offering expanded access to online courses, with 22 percent reporting that online learning was not a funding priority in their district. Some administrators said their teachers are not comfortable using the tools (18 percent) or teaching online (17 percent), are reluctant to try (14 percent), or their school does not have the expertise to create online courses (14 percent).

The report suggests that K-12 students want to pursue online learning to gain more control of their own learning experience, have access to more courses, and work at their own pace. But middle and high school students continue to have different priorities for taking online classes, the report says: Older students were most likely to desire online classes to earn college credit, while younger students would pursue online learning to get extra help in a subject.

 
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But What about Science?

I haven't seen any figures breaking down supply and demand of online education by subject. I expect that science may have more demand and less supply because of the science labs. The technology of prerecorded real experiments allows students to do the same experiments as they would in classrooms, only more of them. They collect the same data, and, just as in classrooms, it's not predetermined but unique to each student. This technology can close the gap. Some of the largest online providers have begun to use this ten year-old technology now, and more are lining up to use it. Your own school can use it even in classrooms to save huge amounts of money.

Posted By: harry674, 2009-08-13 5:23 PM

Online Learning in the UK

Interesting to see how US schools are grappling with the issue of personalised onlione learning. The situation in the UK is similar. The technical tools are not the difficulty so much as the need to refine pedagogical procedures among teachers so that they can create appropriate lessons needed to enhance personalised learning. Many of our schools have learning platforms which are being used well in some cases and not in others. I would also be interested to learn how schools in the UK are using mobiles, Ipods and Games console units as tools for students to access school learning platforms.

Posted By: aferrier, 2009-08-06 5:12 AM

Technology required.......

Our school district of over 48,000 students does not promote the technology required to support on-line learning. Florida legislators enacted law that all districts would provide access to on-line student learning. Instead of preparing for that, it has fought hard to avoid doing so. Why? School improvement plans are also required by law and technology is a component of that plan yet my child's school has not updated the technology plan since 07-08. The community is apathetic to the situation. The DOE is too. When contacted with issues they take no action. This is the state of education everywhere. Large talk, small actions. We still fail 33% of our l-12 students and only 25% of our college students graduate. We talk, we need to take action.

Posted By: fedup52, 2009-07-07 9:25 AM

Wish it were available when I was in H.S.

I wish that this was available when I was in high school and that my school offered it. There were so many classes that I wanted to take but just simply did not have time to take them. College was the same way and I took 20 credit hours min, every semester.

Posted By: shoving, 2009-07-07 7:13 AM

Best kept secret

It is like a movement under the radar. It is a force that will continue to grow and then will bust out and be more known.

Posted By: bernard mcinerney, 2009-07-06 7:17 PM

Free resources

There are many free resources online that may be worth checking out, including MIT Open Courseware and brainyflix.com (much more specialized on SAT prep). Just need to do a little digging!

Posted By: jackjr, 2009-07-02 9:55 PM

Pondering....

This article was very interesting. It is amazing to me that students are requesting online courses. I am 35 now and just reflecting on what school was like when I was in k-12; online learning was unheard of. Today's students will not know life without it. Online learning is changing the way we do life.

Posted By: katrina q, 2009-07-02 11:37 AM

 

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