Difference Between Online and In Class
Provision of Course and teaching materials The first generation
of distance education institutions placed great emphasis on the
creation of excellent teaching resources, in first print and
later multi-media formats. This was in contrast (both in terms
of time and money expended and resulting quality) to resources
committed to classroom teaching. Typically classroom teachers,
with the aid of a textbook or two and a set of informal lecture
notes (now augmented by Powerpoint slides) produce
individualized courseware, of variable quality and little or no
editing or distribution. Both classroom and distance education
courses are most often built upon the unbundled provision of a
text book, created by commercial publishers and paid for,
usually in addition to course fees, by the student. The
provision and widespread distribution of Open Educational
Resources (OER) is beginning to disrupt both classroom and
distance education models of courseware production and
distribution. At present there are thousands of full
post-secondary course modules available as OER online and tens
of thousands of lesson modules in repositories such as the
MIT-sponsored OCWC site, Rice Universitys Connexions, the
Saylor Foundation, MERLOT, the Washington State Open Course
Library, ARIADNE in Europe, and many others (Hylen, 2007). In
addition, the US Department of Labor has made $2 billion
available over four years for training initiatives that must
use an open access license (Department of Labor, 2011). Access
to this rapidly growing font of usable learning materials has
already increased the quantity and quality of informal
learning. Seely (2011) notes that OER have had the most visible
impact on individual learning however increasingly classes of
students are using OER materials. The MIT OCW site alone has
more than one million unique visitors a month. According to
their statistics, 45% are self-learners and nearly 42% are
students at other universities (MIT, 2011). These numbers do
not count other OER sites or even MIT OCW mirror sites. Tufts
University estimates that more than half of their visitors are
independent learners (Lee, Albright, OLeary, et al., 2008). As
the quantity and quality of OER increases, they will become
even more readily used by faculty. Already there is a large
movement towards the use of open textbooks, primarily driven by
their growing costs (US Government Accountability Office, 2005;
Allen, 2010; Beshears, 2010).