Online education has largely been treated like a stepchild in the world of higher education. It gets a bit of food and some old clothes, but not much attention in comparison with the university’s real children. A new online initiative begun by the University of Illinois, however, may give this Cinderella a more prominent place than it has had before.
Announced last May, the Global Campus Initiative (GCI) is a remarkable university undertaking that should give online education more prominence. What’s more, the GCI is intended to be a profit-making venture and the startup capital will be raised from private sources. The tuition paid by students – and no breaks for Illinois residents – are expected to cover all costs. Implicitly, Illinois is saying, “We think we have an educational product that will pass the test of the market.” Very interesting, especially since several high-profile online education ventures have failed.
Preparations for GCI will take place in 2007 and the first classes are expected to be held in January 2008.
The GCI is primarily aimed at “non-traditional” learners. It will offer accredited baccalaureate, master’s and doctoral degrees as well as certificate and professional development programs, mostly aimed at business and technology fields. This will allow GCI to tap into the fast-growing demand for corporate e-learning and other markets where convenience for the student is a key concern.
Is online education really worth the effort, though? It has often been derided as “education lite” by people who maintain that true education requires students and teacher in the same room, face to face. The GCI Final Report argues, however, that such direct contact is neither necessary nor sufficient for learning. As the Report says, “Online learning is more about connecting people than connecting computers. It is much more a community experience than a solitary routine.” GCI also contends that online courses can be “writing intensive,” which is something of a surprise to me, but if true, that would be a strong plus since many college students graduate with woeful writing skills these days.
A further testament to the educational value of online courses is the rapid and sustained growth they have experienced in the last decade. Online enrollments grew at a 23 percent annual rate between 2002 and 2005. It is hard to believe that so many people (especially people in their twenties and thirties who are in the labor force and carefully value their time) would be signing up for online classes if they didn’t think they were getting something of benefit. Moreover, the recently released National Survey of Student Engagement reports that students who take courses online are on the whole more active in their coursework than are students enrolled in traditional classes.
GCI says that it will be “market-driven.” Not only will its offerings reflect the desires of students for serious and useful courses (accounting and information technology, yes; women’s studies and history of rock music, no), but its personnel policy will also be consistent with the need to operate in a businesslike fashion. Employment will be at will and no one will have tenure. It’s nearly impossible to run an organization that is responsive to the market if many of the employees have the closest thing to guaranteed jobs. (Last year, I wrote about an MBA program that has similarly rejected tenure.)
On one page of the GCI Report, a chart shows University of Illinois peer institutions with respect to their involvement in online education. Michigan State has 42 online degree and certification programs. Penn State has 50. The University of Texas has 22; Wisconsin 15. UNC is on the chart, near the bottom, with zero programs.
That isn’t to say that UNC needs to replicate GCI, which has a big head start and can enroll any student who meets the admission requirements. With online education, location just doesn’t matter. If a citizen of North Carolina wants an online course or degree program offered by GCI, there is no reason to lament the fact that he isn’t enrolling in “our” university. The point, rather, is that UNC should be looking for new, original ways of using the internet to connect students – wherever they may be – with good learning experiences.
In his book Shakespeare, Einstein and the Bottom Line, David Kirp recounts the many flops in online education during the dot.com era. Schools that have been burned include New York University, Cornell, Duke, Harvard, Temple, Penn’s Wharton School, and UNC. Then he writes, “Despite all the dot-com failures, the hype about Internet-based learning does contain an essential truth: The Internet is transforming education. The number of students who acquire part of their education online will grow rapidly; and as bandwidth increases, the ways they use the Internet will evolve, with the astonishing speed that Moore’s Law ascribes to the semiconductor industry.”
Perhaps the University of Illinois will get the formula right. It certainly bears watching.