It’s time to stop showing your age and abandon any preconceived notions you may have about online learning. Harvard and MIT recently announced that they would be teaming up on a $60 million project to offer free online college courses under a joint venture called "edX”. By their own admission, this is as much about research as it is about learning.
Harvard University president, Drew Faust, declared during the news conference at which she and MIT president Susan Hockfield announced the new initiative, "Through this partnership, we will not only make knowledge more available, but we will learn more about learning.” They shared the belief that this gives both schools a chance to collect data that, according to Harvard’s provost, Alan Garber, "Simply hasn’t existed”.
The efficacy of online courses has long been a question for educators. We now have evidence suggesting that the computer can be as effective as the classroom. According to a recent Boston Globe article describing the results of the first large, randomized study to support online learning, conducted by Ithaka S+R, researchers found that students fared equally well in both formats on every measure of learning. The only difference was that the "online group appeared to learn faster.”
Another study done by the US Department of Education found that, on average, students doing some or all of the work online tested higher compared with the average classroom student, a modest but statistically significant difference. The study’s lead author, Barbara Means, noted that the study’s "major significance lies in demonstrating that online learning today actually tends to be better than conventional instruction.”
The real promise of online education, experts say, is providing learning experiences that:
1. Are more customized to individual students than is possible in the classroom
2. Provide more learning-by-doing which many students find more engaging and useful
3. Are more effective in building learning communities
4. Spare our global students the expense and time of travel
2. Provide more learning-by-doing which many students find more engaging and useful
3. Are more effective in building learning communities
4. Spare our global students the expense and time of travel
FFI GEN is in good company with some of the major universities making the shift to online learning. Most recently we have released a 100% online program of study with FFI GEN Fast Track Certificates in Family Business Advising (CFBA) and Family Wealth Advising (CFWA), which significantly expand the accessibility of FFI's professional education programs globally. Learn more about the program at www.ffigen.org. As we work at creating cutting edge multidisciplinary courses, we will continue to monitor the programs, the lessons, and student feedback carefully to produce excellent educational experiences in flexible learning environments.
By Jane Hilburt-Davis
About the Contributor:
About the Contributor:
Jane Hilburt-Davis, is academic coordinator for FFI GEN, president of Key Resources, LLC, a family business consulting firm based in Boston, MA, and is co-author of Consulting to Family Businesses. An FFI Fellow and past president of FFI, Jane received the 2008 Richard Beckard Practice Award, is the author of many articles and case studies, and has trained and mentored family business advisors. She can be reached athilburt-davis@ffigen.org.
About the Practitioner:
The Practitioner provides comprehensive news, analysis, trends and research intelligence affecting the family enterprise provider community. Through its blog and online journal The Practitioner provides family enterprise professionals with practical, user-friendly content on best practices from across the core disciplines of behavioral science, law, finance, and management science as well as the latest multidisciplinary thinking in these fields.
Source: Campdebfb
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