rethinking course development

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Rethinking Course Development: Competing on Quality Larry Gould American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU), Academic Affairs Winter Meeting, February 9, 2008, Tempe, Arizona

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Presented by Larry Gould, Provost Tempe, February 2008

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Rethinking Course Development

Rethinking Course Development: Competing on Quality

Larry Gould

American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU), Academic Affairs Winter

Meeting, February 9, 2008, Tempe, Arizona

Page 2: Rethinking Course Development

Where in the World is FHSU?

Page 3: Rethinking Course Development

About Fort Hays State University

• Founding member of the Higher Learning Commission’s (HLC/NCA) alternative accreditation track known as the Academic Quality Improvement Program (AQIP)

• Academic Programming 52 undergraduate degree programs 19 graduate degree programs 25 programs completely accessible off-campus

• General Structure Three divisions: academic, student affairs, admin-finance Four academic colleges, graduate school, distance education

delivery unit called the Virtual College

Page 4: Rethinking Course Development

About Fort Hays State University

• Branding Tagline: Affordable Success

• Enrollment: The Way We Were (Fall, 1998) On-campus: 4718 Off-campus: 839 Grand total: 5557

• Enrollment: The Way We Are (Fall, 2007) On-campus: 4449 Off-campus: 5375 (2300 in China) Grand total: 9824

Page 5: Rethinking Course Development

Distance Education Course Development at Fort Hays State University

• Historical Context

• The First Wave: Courses

• The Second Wave: Programs

• The Third Wave: Quality Assurance

Page 6: Rethinking Course Development

Why Facilitate a “Third Wave” of Distance Education Course Development?

• A Changing Competitive Landscape: Delivery Mode Is No Longer a Niche Growth Opportunity

• A Changing Competitive Landscape: Diversity of Schools, Programs and Approaches

• A Changing Value Proposition: Beyond Convenience, Flexibility and the Adult Learner

• Enhancing the Value Proposition: Positioning and Differentiation Strategies

Page 7: Rethinking Course Development

Refining the FHSU Message to the Consumer: Perceptions of Quality

• Positioning: price, geography, faculty, product, performance, etc.

• Differentiation: affordable, traditional campus, responsive, 26 programs, high student satisfaction, etc.

• Using Quality: Creating Performance Indicators and Transitioning to the “Age of Brands”

Page 8: Rethinking Course Development

Facilitating Quality Through Policy and Process

• How do we achieve “differentiation” and “brand recognition” through “performance indicators?”

• How do we respond to learner feedback to effect perceptions of quality?

• The Answer: Rethinking and Recasting the Distance Education Course Development Process

Page 9: Rethinking Course Development

The Process of Rethinking the Process

• Results Management: Student Evaluations, NSSE, Noel-Levitz, etc.

• Virtual College Advisory Committee

• Center for Teaching Excellence and Learning Technologies (CTELT)

• Office of Quality Management

• Provost’s Council

Page 10: Rethinking Course Development

Elements and Implications

• Three pathways to course development

• Incorporates national standards of “best practices” (Quality Matters) to ensure creative instructional design through rubric based process and modeling

• Authorizing of process driven by department, college and institutional needs

• Increases efficient use of scarce resources (people and time)

Page 11: Rethinking Course Development

Elements and Implications

• Linked to academic quality improvement work completed during Year of the Department

• Faculty-driven, collegial peer review, and team-based

• Designed to improve both on- and off-campus courses

• Process includes phases and steps that promote faculty enhancement and learning

Page 12: Rethinking Course Development

Elements and Implications

• Recognition that teaching on-line can be overwhelming at first and different from F2F

• Intended to bring a diversity of knowledge about course development to the institution and promote dissemination and archiving of best practices and new thinking

• The new process strives to improve FHSU’s competitive positioning and differentiation through enhanced performance indicators (perception of quality, retention and student satisfaction)

Page 13: Rethinking Course Development

Elements and Implications

• Second horizon goals

– Build a cadre and community of on-line quality champions

– Develop a culture of collective responsibility for high-quality course development

Page 14: Rethinking Course Development

• To the student: When you turn your course on, does it return the favor?

• Thanks

• Questions?

• Link to full process and other information:

<http://www.fhsu.edu/virtualcollege>