The Difference Between Emergency Remote Teaching and Online Learning
The Difference Between Emergency Remote Teaching and
Online Learning
Well-planned online learning
experiences are meaningfully different from courses offered online in response
to a crisis or disaster. Colleges and universities working to maintain
instruction during the COVID-19 pandemic should understand those differences when
evaluating this emergency remote teaching.
Due to the threat of COVID-19,
colleges and universities are facing decisions about how to continue teaching
and learning while keeping their faculty, staff, and students safe from a
public health emergency that is moving fast and not well understood. Many
institutions have opted to cancel all face-to-face classes, including labs and
other learning experiences, and have mandated that faculty move their courses
online to help prevent the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19. The list
of institutions of higher education making this decision has been growing each
day. Institutions of all sizes and types—state colleges and universities, Ivy
League institutions, community colleges, and others—are moving their classes
online.1 Bryan Alexander has curated
the status of hundreds of institutions.2
Moving instruction online can
enable the flexibility of teaching and learning anywhere, anytime, but the
speed with which this move to online instruction is expected to happen is
unprecedented and staggering. Although campus support personnel and teams are
usually available to help faculty members learn about and implement online
learning, these teams typically support a small pool of faculty interested in
teaching online. In the present situation, these individuals and teams will not
be able to offer the same level of support to all faculty in such a narrow
preparation window. Faculty might feel like instructional MacGyvers, having to
improvise quick solutions in less-than-ideal circumstances. No matter how clever
a solution might be—and some very clever solutions are emerging—many
instructors will understandably find this process stressful.
The temptation to compare
online learning to face-to-face instruction in these circumstances will be
great. In fact, an article in the Chronicle of Higher Education has
already called for a "grand experiment" doing exactly that.3 This is a highly problematic
suggestion, however. First and foremost, the politics of any such debate must
be acknowledged. "Online learning" will become a politicized term
that can take on any number of meanings depending on the argument someone wants
to advance. In talking about lessons learned when institutions moved classes
online during a shutdown in South Africa, Laura Czerniewicz starts with this
very lesson and what happened around the construct of "blended
learning" at the time.4 The idea of
blended learning was drawn into political agendas without paying sufficient
attention to the fact that institutions would make different decisions and
invest differently, resulting in widely varying solutions and results from one
institution to another. With some of that hindsight as wisdom, we seek to
advance some careful distinctions that we hope can inform the evaluations and
reflections that will surely result from this mass move by colleges and
universities.
Online learning carries a
stigma of being lower quality than face-to-face learning, despite research
showing otherwise. These hurried moves online by so many institutions at once
could seal the perception of online learning as a weak option, when in truth
nobody making the transition to online teaching under these circumstances will
truly be designing to take full advantage of the affordances and possibilities
of the online format.
Researchers in educational
technology, specifically in the subdiscipline of online and distance learning,
have carefully defined terms over the years to distinguish between the highly
variable design solutions that have been developed and implemented: distance learning,
distributed learning, blended learning, online learning, mobile learning, and
others. Yet an understanding of the important differences has mostly not
diffused beyond the insular world of educational technology and instructional
design researchers and professionals. Here, we want to offer an important
discussion around the terminology and formally propose a specific term for the
type of instruction being delivered in these pressing circumstances: emergency
remote teaching.
Many active members of the
academic community, including some of us, have been hotly debating the
terminology in social media, and "emergency remote teaching" has
emerged as a common alternative term used by online education researchers and
professional practitioners to draw a clear contrast with what many of us know
as high-quality online education. Some readers may take issue with the use of
the term "teaching" over choices such as "learning" or
"instruction." Rather than debating all of the details of those
concepts, we selected "teaching" because of its simple
definitions—"the act, practice, or profession of a teacher"5 and "the concerted
sharing of knowledge and experience,"6—along with the fact that the first
tasks undertaken during emergency changes in delivery mode are those of a
teacher/instructor/professor.
Effective Online Education
Online education, including
online teaching and learning, has been studied for decades. Numerous research
studies, theories, models, standards, and evaluation criteria focus on quality
online learning, online teaching, and online course design. What we know from
research is that effective online learning results from careful instructional
design and planning, using a systematic model for design and development.7 The design process and the
careful consideration of different design decisions have an impact on the
quality of the instruction. And it is this careful design process that will be
absent in most cases in these emergency shifts.
One of the most comprehensive
summaries of research on online learning comes from the book Learning
Online: What Research Tells Us about Whether, When and How.8 The authors identify nine
dimensions, each of which has numerous options, highlighting the complexity of
the design and decision-making process. The nine dimensions are modality,
pacing, student-instructor ratio, pedagogy, instructor role online, student
role online, online communication synchrony, role of online assessments, and
source of feedback (see "Online learning design options").
Online learning design options (moderating variables)
- Modality
- Fully online
- Blended (over 50%
online)
- Blended (25–50%
online)
- Web-enabled F2F
Pacing
- Self-paced (open
entry, open exit)
- Class-paced
- Class-paced with
some self-paced
Student-Instructor Ratio
- < 35 to 1
- 36–99 to 1
- 100–999 to 1
- > 1,000 to 1
Pedagogy
- Expository
- Practice
- Exploratory
- Collaborative
Role of Online Assessments
- Determine if
student is ready for new content
- Tell system how to
support the student (adaptive instruction)
- Provide student or
teacher with information about learning state
- Input to grade
- Identify students
at risk of failure
·
Instructor Role Online
·
Active instruction online
·
Small presence online
·
None
Student Role Online
·
Listen or read
·
Complete problems or answer questions
·
Explore simulation and resources
·
Collaborate with peers
Online Communication Synchrony
·
Asynchronous only
·
Synchronous only
·
Some blend of both
Source of Feedback
·
Automated
·
Teacher
·
Peers
Source: Content adapted from Barbara Means, Marianne Bakia, and Robert
Murphy, Learning Online: What Research Tells Us about Whether,
When and How (New York: Routledge, 2014).
Within each of these
dimensions, there are options. Complicating matters, not all of the options are
equally effective. For example, decisions around class size will greatly
constrain what strategies you can use. Practice and feedback, for example, are
well established in the literature, but it's harder to implement this as class
size grows, eventually reaching a point where it's just not possible for an
instructor to provide quality feedback. In the case of synchrony, what you
choose will really depend on your learners' characteristics and what best meets
their needs (adult learners require more flexibility, so asynchronous is
usually best, perhaps with optional synchronous sessions, whereas younger
learners benefit from the structure of required synchronous sessions).
Research on types of
interaction—which includes student–content, student–student, and
student–learner—is one of the more robust bodies of research in online
learning. In short, it shows that the presence of each of these types of
interaction, when meaningfully integrated, increases the learning outcomes.9 Thus, careful planning for
online learning includes not just identifying the content to cover but also
carefully tending to how you're going to support different types of
interactions that are important to the learning process. This approach
recognizes learning as both a social and a cognitive process, not merely a
matter of information transmission.
Those who have built online
programs over the years will attest that effective online learning aims to be a
learning community and supports learners not just instructionally but with
co-curricular engagement and other social supports. Consider how much
infrastructure exists around face-to-face education that supports student
success: library resources, housing, career services, health services, and so
on. Face-to-face education isn't successful because lecturing is good. Lectures
are one instructional aspect of an overall ecosystem specifically designed to
support learners with formal, informal, and social resources. Ultimately,
effective online education requires an investment in an ecosystem of learner
supports, which take time to identify and build. Relative to other options,
simple online content delivery can be quick and inexpensive, but confusing that
with robust online education is akin to confusing lectures with the totality of
residential education.
Typical planning, preparation,
and development time for a fully online university course is six to nine months
before the course is delivered. Faculty are usually more comfortable teaching
online by the second or third iteration of their online courses. It will be
impossible for every faculty member to suddenly become an expert in online
teaching and learning in this current situation, in which lead times range from
a single day to a few weeks. While there are resources to which faculty can
turn for assistance, the scale of change currently being required on many
campuses will stress the systems that provide those resources and most likely
will surpass their capacities. Let's face it: many of the online learning
experiences that instructors will be able to offer their students will not be
fully featured or necessarily well planned, and there's a high probability for
suboptimal implementation. We need to recognize that everyone will be doing the
best they can, trying to take just the essentials with them as they make a mad
dash during the emergency. Thus, the distinction is important between the
normal, everyday type of effective online instruction and that which we are
doing in a hurry with bare minimum resources and scant time: emergency remote
teaching.
Emergency Remote Teaching
In contrast to experiences that
are planned from the beginning and designed to be online, emergency remote
teaching (ERT) is a temporary shift of instructional delivery to an alternate
delivery mode due to crisis circumstances. It involves the use of fully remote
teaching solutions for instruction or education that would otherwise be
delivered face-to-face or as blended or hybrid courses and that will return to
that format once the crisis or emergency has abated. The primary objective in
these circumstances is not to re-create a robust educational ecosystem but
rather to provide temporary access to instruction and instructional supports in
a manner that is quick to set up and is reliably available during an emergency
or crisis. When we understand ERT in this manner, we can start to divorce it
from "online learning." There are many examples of other countries
responding to school and university closures in a time of crisis by
implementing models such as mobile learning, radio, blended learning, or other
solutions that are contextually more feasible. For example, in a study on
education's role in fragility and emergency situations, the Inter-Agency
Network for Education in Emergencies examined four case studies.10 One of those cases was
Afghanistan, where education was disrupted by conflict and violence and schools
themselves were targets, sometimes because girls were trying to access
education. In order to take children off the streets and keep them safe, radio
education and DVDs were used to maintain and expand educational access and also
were aimed at promoting education for girls.
What becomes apparent as we
examine examples of educational planning in crises is that these situations
require creative problem solving. We have to be able to think outside standard
boxes to generate various possible solutions that help meet the new needs for
our learners and communities. In some cases, it might even help us generate
some new solutions to intractable problems, such as the dangers girls faced
trying to access education in Afghanistan. Thus, it may be tempting to think
about ERT as a bare-bones approach to standard instruction. In reality, it is a
way of thinking about delivery modes, methods, and media, specifically as they
map to rapidly changing needs and limitations in resources, such as faculty
support and training.11
In the present situation, the
campus support teams that are usually available to help faculty members learn
about and implement online learning will not be able to offer the same level of
support to all faculty who need it. Faculty support teams play a critical role
in the learning experiences of students by helping faculty members develop
face-to-face or online learning experiences. Current support models might
include full-course design support, professional development opportunities,
content development, learning management system training and support, and
multimedia creation in partnership with faculty experts. Faculty who seek
support typically have varying levels of digital fluency and are often
accustomed to one-on-one support when experimenting with online tools. The
shift to ERT requires that faculty take more control of the course design,
development, and implementation process. With the expectation of rapid
development of online teaching and learning events and the large number of
faculty in need of support, faculty development and support teams must find
ways to meet the institutional need to provide instructional continuity while
helping faculty develop skills to work and teach in an online environment. As
such, institutions must rethink the way instructional support units do their
work, at least during a crisis.
The rapid approach necessary
for ERT may diminish the quality of the courses delivered. A full-course
development project can take months when done properly. The need to "just
get it online" is in direct contradiction to the time and effort normally
dedicated to developing a quality course. Online courses created in this way
should not be mistaken for long-term solutions but accepted as a temporary
solution to an immediate problem. Especially concerning is the degree to which
the accessibility of learning materials might not be addressed during ERT. This
is but one reason that universal design for learning (UDL) should be part of
all discussions around teaching and learning. UDL principles focus on the
design of learning environments that are flexible, inclusive, and
student-centered to ensure that all students can access and learn from the
course materials, activities, and assignments.12
Evaluating Emergency Remote Teaching
Institutions will certainly
want to conduct evaluations of their ERT efforts, but what should they
evaluate? First, let's consider what not to evaluate. A common
misconception is that comparing a face-to-face course with an online version of
the course constitutes a useful evaluation. This type of assessment, known as a
media comparison study, provides no real value, for at least three reasons:
First, any medium is simply a
way to deliver information, and one medium is not inherently better or worse
than any other medium. Second, we need to better understand different media and
the way people learn with different media to design effective studies. And,
third, there are too many confounding variables in even the best media
comparison study for the results to be valid and meaningful.13
Researchers who conduct media
comparison studies are looking at "the whole unique medium and [giving]
little thought to each one's attributes and characteristics, to learner needs,
or to psychological learning theories."14
Other approaches to evaluation
can be useful in this move to ERT. The success of distance and online learning
experiences can be measured in a variety of ways, depending on how
"success" is defined from a given stakeholder's perspective. From the
faculty point of view, student learning outcomes would be of primary interest.
Did learners achieve the intended knowledge, skills, and/or attitudes that were
the focus of the instructional experience? Attitudinal outcomes are also
possibly of interest, for students and for faculty. For students, issues such
as interest, motivation, and engagement are directly connected to learner
success and so would be possible evaluation foci. For faculty, attitudes toward
online instruction and all that it entails can affect the perception of
success.
Programmatic outcomes such as
course and program completion rates, market reach, faculty time investments,
impacts on promotion and tenure processes—all of these are relevant issues
related to the offering of distance courses and programs. Finally,
implementation resources and strategies are possible areas of evaluation
inquiry, such as the reliability of selected technological delivery systems,
the provision of and access to learner support systems, support for faculty
professional development for online teaching pedagogies and tools, policy and
governance issues related to distance program development, and quality
assurance. All of these factors can influence the effectiveness of distance and
online learning experiences and can serve to inform learning experience design
and program development and implementation.15 These recommended areas of
evaluation are for well-planned distance or online learning
efforts and may not be appropriate in the case of ERT. Evaluating ERT will require
broader questions, especially during initial implementations.
Next, let us recommend where
you should focus your evaluation related to ERT efforts. The language of the
CIPP model will be used for structure.16 CIPP is an acronym
representing context, inputs, process, and products (see table 1).
Table 1.
CIPP evaluation terms
Context Evaluations
|
Input Evaluations
|
Process Evaluations
|
Product Evaluations
|
"Assess needs, problems,
assets, and opportunities, as well as relevant contextual conditions and
dynamics"
|
"Assess a program's strategy,
action plan, staffing arrangements, and budget for feasibility and potential
cost-effectiveness to meet targeted needs and achieve goals."
|
"Monitor, document, assess,
and report on the implementation of plans."
|
"Identify and assess costs and
outcomes—intended and unintended, short term and long term."
|
Source: Daniel L. Stufflebeam and Guili Zhang, The CIPP Evaluation Model: How to Evaluate for Improvement
and Accountability (New York: Guilford Publications,
2017).
In the case of ERT,
institutions might want to consider evaluation questions such as the following:
- Given the need to shift to remote instruction,
what internal and external resources were necessary in supporting this
transition? What aspects of the context (institutional, social,
governmental) affected the feasibility and effectiveness of the
transition? (context)
- How did the university interactions with
students, families, personnel, and local and government stakeholders
impact perceived responsiveness to the shift to ERT? (context)
- Was the technology infrastructure sufficient
to handle the needs of ERT? (input)
- Did the campus support staff have sufficient
capacity to handle the needs of ERT? (input)
- Was our ongoing faculty professional
development sufficient to enable ERT? How can we enhance opportunities for
immediate and flexible learning demands related to alternative approaches
to instruction and learning? (input)
- Where did faculty, students, support
personnel, and administrators struggle the most with ERT? How can we adapt
our processes to respond to such operational challenges in the future?
(process)
- What were the programmatic outcomes of the ERT
initiative (i.e., course completion rates, aggregated grade analyses,
etc.)? How can challenges related to these outcomes be addressed in
support of the students and faculty impacted by these issues? (product)
- How can feedback from learners, faculty, and
campus support teams inform ERT needs in the future? (product)
Evaluation of ERT should be
more focused on the context, input, and process elements than product
(learning). Note that we are not advocating for no evaluation of whether or not
learning occurred, or to what extent it occurred, but simply stressing that the
urgency of ERT and all that will take to make it happen in a short time frame
will be the most critical elements to evaluate during this crisis. This is
being recognized by some as a few institutions are beginning to announce
changing to pass/fail options rather letter grades during ERT.17
Also, given the continued
evidence of problems surrounding student evaluations of instruction under
typical higher education experiences, we recommend that the standard,
end-of-semester teaching evaluations definitely not be counted against faculty
members engaged in ERT.18 If an institution's policy
mandates that those evaluations be administered, consider amending the policy,
or make sure that the results are clearly qualified with the circumstances of
the term or semester.
Final Thoughts
Everyone involved in this
abrupt migration to online learning must realize that these crises and
disasters also create disruptions to student, staff, and faculty lives, outside
their association with the university. So all of this work must be done with
the understanding that the move to ERT will likely not be the priority of all
those involved. Instructors and administrators are urged to consider that
students might not be able to attend to courses immediately. As a result,
asynchronous activities might be more reasonable than synchronous ones.
Flexibility with deadlines for assignments within courses, course policies, and
institutional policies should be considered. For a high-level example, the US
Department of Education has relaxed some requirements and policies in the face
of COVID-19.19
Hopefully the COVID-19 threat
will soon be a memory. When it is, we should not simply return to our teaching
and learning practices prior to the virus, forgetting about ERT. There likely
will be future public health and safety concerns, and in recent years, campuses
have been closed due to natural disasters such as wildfires, hurricanes, and
the polar vortex.20 Thus, the possible need for
ERT must become part of a faculty member's skill set, as well as professional
development programming for any personnel involved in the instructional mission
of colleges and universities.
The threat of COVID-19 has
presented some unique challenges for institutions of higher education. All
parties involved—students, faculty, and staff—are being asked to do
extraordinary things regarding course delivery and learning that have not been
seen on this scale in the lifetimes of anyone currently involved. Although this
situation is stressful, when it is over, institutions will emerge with an
opportunity to evaluate how well they were able to implement ERT to maintain
continuity of instruction. It is important to avoid the temptation to equate
ERT with online learning during those evaluations. With careful planning,
officials at every campus can evaluate their efforts, allowing those involved
to highlight strengths and identify weaknesses to be better prepared for future
needs to implement ERT.
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