Wednesday, April 5, 2017
Economist James D. Miller now thinks online education could increase demand for instructors, not destroy their jobs. He posted an op-ed in 2011 sounding the bell that online education would replace instructors with technology. He writes, "In 2011, I thought that much of online education was boring, but I
expected content creators to eventually succeed in making their material
interesting enough to hold the enthusiastic attention of most students. I further forgot to take into account that teachers have, for
literally thousands of years, tried to make their lectures more
interesting and yet, as most of us can attest, we have still not
succeeded in consistently producing lectures that most students find
more enjoyable." One of the benefits we are seeing at BRCC is that faculty teaching eLearning classes are using the tools and technology from their online classes and applying it to their face-to-face courses. Next week, there are two additional professional development opportunities. Join us on Monday at the N. Acadian Instructional Site to learn about some new active learning methods. On Tuesday, the session on overteaching is at the Frazier Instructional Site. You can learn more about both events and register here.