Should Lecture Classes Be Replaced by "StarProfs Classes"?
By Marty Nemko
Here’s an unconventional alternative to the traditional
lecture course that could be called StarProfs Classes, a
very specific type of online course that would be disseminated
nationwide.
It dovetails with MIT’s making all its syllabi available
nationwide, the recommendations in a new book, Disrupting
Class, by Harvard professor Clayton Christenson, and with
Carol
Twigg’s work at the National Center for Academic
Transformation (NCAT). Their research and a priori arguments
suggest that StarProfs Classes would be particularly
beneficial for diverse student bodies and for students who
don’t do well in lecture-centric courses.
What is a StarProfs Class and how might one be
developed?
Let’s take for example, the course, Introduction to
Biology.
The Association of College & University Biology Educators would
select 15 outstanding educators who teach Introduction to Biology.
The 15 would divide “Introduction to Biology” into 15
modules, with each educator choosing to create and deliver the
lecture section of two modules, so there would be two versions of
each module. Instead of having just one lecturer, the student would
be exposed to 15, hence the moniker, StarProfs
Classes.
Each professor, for his or her two modules, would develop:
-- mini-lectures punctuated by demonstrations
-- student-immersive simulations
-- remedial and enrichment supplementation
-- quizzes
-- sample reading list, assignments, and exams. Each
institution’s academic department or an individual professor
could use those or develop their own to better align the course
with the professor’s or department’s preferences.
Experts in online education and in the technology of its
implementation would be available for the professors to call on in
developing their modules.
During StarProfs classes, a person would be available
online to answer questions in real-time.
N.B.: Discussion/seminar sections of those courses would remain
in-person, as in a traditional course.
The development of StarProfs Classes could be funded by
government, higher education consortia, the private sector, or
public-private partnerships.
Advantages of StarProfs Classes
StarProfs Classes would enable every student at any
college -- from the best- to the worst-funded -- to receive, in a
single course:
-- exposure to 15 of the nation’s finest instructors.
-- to see demonstrations that are too expensive or too dangerous to
create on each campus
-- to participate in immersive simulations that are too complicated
or expensive to develop by an individual campus
-- true individualization: students could proceed through the
modules at their own pace, replaying material, consulting remedial
or enrichment material, and/or “attending” the second
professor’s version of the module
NCAT’s model isn’t as specific as StarProfs
Classes but is much more similar to it than to traditional
lecture sections. Research on it, reported on the NCAT website,
found that:
• Of the 30 institutions that participated, 25 measured
significant increases in student learning in the
“redesigned” course when compared to the traditional
course while the other five showed learning equivalent to
traditional formats.
• Of the 24 institutions that measured student retention, 18
showed significant increases in course completion.
• All 30 institutions were able to reduce instructional costs,
on average by 37 percent, with a range of 20 percent to 77 percent.
[This is for a course developed by and for one institution only, so
it is much more expensive than the national one proposed in this
post.]
• The redesign strategies, while effective for all students,
have a positive impact on traditionally underserved students
(minority students, low-income students, and adult students).
StarProfs Classes thus would seem to provide a more
effective and less expensive approach than the status quo: a
nationful of live sages on the stage (ranging from terrific to
terrible) lecturing to auditoria of students or to students
watching the lecture on TV.
Disadvantages of StarProfs Classes
If widely adopted, StarProfs Classes would bring
considerable uniformity of instruction across the nation. After
all, while the course was taught by 15 professors, each module
would be taught by just two instructors, and most students would
“attend” just one module. Such uniformity brings
benefits, for example, that professors of advanced biology courses,
would have a good idea of what students who had taken Intro to
Biology had learned , even if a student had taken it at another
institution. But uniformity, of course, also brings disadvantages,
especially with topics on which there are multiple defensible
perspectives. The problem could be somewhat mitigated by creating
multiple versions of a StarProfs Class, using different
teams of 15 instructors.
Some students might learn better from one average live instructor
than even from 15 top professors online. Then again, many students
don't learn much from live lecturers ... even if the student does
show up for class. And the data I've presented above suggests that,
on average, students learn more from StarProfs-like
classes . Too, my earlier blog posts all too clearly document
that, with traditional instruction, average students and especially
those with poor high-school records grow frighteningly little for
all the years and money they're spending on college. One option is,
where possible, to offer both a traditional and a
StarProfs version of a course.
StarProfs Classes could cost many faculty members their
jobs. An institution, however, could elect to redirect the
instructors’ efforts. For example, according to NCAT, the
institutions that participated in its Program in Course Redesign
have:
• Left the savings in the department that achieved them for
continuous improvement projects or for additional course
redesigns.
• Provided a greater range of offerings at the second-year,
upper-division or graduate levels.
• Left the savings in the departments to reduce teaching load
and/or provide greater time for research.
• Improve training of part-time faculty.
Developing StarProfs Classes would be costly, but that
cost would be amortized across all institutions that used it, so
that, if the courses were widely adopted, the per-student cost
would end up much lower than of traditional lecture classes.
So what do you think? Do you think that StarProfs Classes
offer that rare combination of better learning at lower cost
without overriding disadvantages? Or do you believe its
disadvantages outweigh? Or do you see it being of value only in
particular situations. If so, which? Or do you have a suggestion
for improving StarProfs Classes so their advantages would
outweigh their disdvantages?
© Marty Nemko 2004-2024. Usage Rights