As a current graduate student whose core curriculum is taught through distance education, I understand the benefits - and challenges - of e-learning. I could talk about the benefits, get very education-geeky by talking about a constructivist approach to teaching and how it impacts how one learns, and how for many, technology increases one's interest in learning, especially if the learner is a self-proclaimed techno-geek (like me); but, what I'd rather do is focus on the challenges.
Looking at e-learning from the teacher's perspective (of which I will be at some point in the future), my cha
llenge and the challenge for all who teach from a virtual lectern, will be -- as I read in Vincent Wade of Trinity College Dublin and Helen Ashman of Nottingham University's Guest Editors' Introduction entitled, "Evolving the Infrastructure for Technology-Enhanced Distance Learning" in the May/June 2007 issue of IEEE Internet Computing -- "providing active, stimulating, and authentic learning experiences that support learner collaboration, construction, and reflection remains key to successful distance learning technologies." [IEEE Internet Computing May/June 2007 issue]. Likewise, continuing legal education providers who have leapt onto the webcast/ podcast/online-CLE-seminars bandwagon with all their might must find ways to make their e-learning seminars stimulating in order to be/remain successful.
As a frequent speaker at CLE events, my challenge always has been finding ways to maintain attendee attention. I suspect it may be less of a challenge in person that it may be though non-video e-learning modes. From my experience, while there are always those techno-attendees who either bring their laptops along with their Internet air cards and have the ability to surf the 'net, check email, or post to their blogs, or those who remain steadfastly focused on their PDAs (I'm guilty on both accounts) while pretending to absorb and digest all that the speaker has to say about the topic du jour, the ability to successfully convey one's message to a group of people who have little else to focus on other than the speaker at the lectern is far easier than trying to compete with all of the other myriad of attention-grabbers, e.g., cell phones, email, telephone, people, that come into play in an e-learning environment.
Those seminars that engage not only the brain but also the senses, I believe, will have greater success. Meaning, those online seminars that stream video along with either a virtual or interactive whiteboard or webcast a PowerPoint presentation, for example, touch the visual and aural senses while simultaneously providing a written presentation may see improved survey results from attendees compared to those seminars that provide audio or written materials alone.
This week's "Hi-Tech Quote of the Week" by Bill Gates certainly comes into play in this instance -- "Never before in history has innovation offered promise of so much to so many in so short a time." From the time I graduated with my bachelor's degree to the time I applied for admission to graduate school (a span of 13 years), the manner and method of teaching at the post-secondary level has changed exponentially. And, it's given me, and so many others like me, the ability to work on my master's from the comfort of my own home -- or during this time last year while in trial in Houston for four months, the comfort of my own hotel room -- rather than driving 38 miles one-way during rush hour Dallas traffic to attend one or two classes a week. And for a self-proclaimed techno-geek, I not only appreciate it but I love it!