On Thursday I
viewed a webinar discussing the results of a recent Inside Higher Ed survey of
faculty attitudes on technology; 2075 faculty and 105 administrators had been surveyed. (If you would like to view the PowerPoint from the webinar or the webinar
itself, you'll find it at
https://www.insidehighered.com/audio/2015/11/12/2015-survey-faculty-attitudes-technology
)
Four issues stood
out for me:
1. When asked
“Did use of educational technology lead to improved student outcomes?” only 20%
of the faculty and 35% of the administrators said outcomes were improved
significantly. Tenured faculty were
somewhat more skeptical than non-tenured but most were in the middle, agreeing
that technology somewhat improved student outcomes. The majority of both
faculty and administrators felt that the cost was worthwhile.
2. However, when
asked “Do for-credit online courses achieve outcomes at least equivalent to
in-person courses?” only 17% of the faculty said yes, while 62% administrators
said yes. One of the narrators made the
point that it might be that the comparison faculty have in their minds is an
idealized picture of a small group of interested, motivated, high-achieving
students sitting around a seminar table discussing complex issues rather than,
for instance, a big lecture hall in an introductory course.
3. With respect
to Plagiarism Detection Software (like Turnitin), most faculty liked it. The moderator, however, was concerned that
students often don’t know what plagiarism is and pointed out that this is
something teachers need to address and not just have a false sense of security
that if students run their papers through the software they will understand the
complicated issue of plagiarism.
4. Finally, there
was one issue on which everyone agreed: 93% of faculty said textbooks are
priced too high, and 92% thought professors should assign more open educational
resources. Here, the moderator pointed
out how much time was needed to find and incorporate open educational resources
into a class and, more worrisome, how much time is needed to change those
resources as times change, serving as a possible disincentive for course
improvement.
What do you
think? Any reaction to any of these points
with respect to your own attitudes and your classes here at Lincoln?