College Courses Online Are Disappointing. Here’s How to Fix Them
Riya Yadav, INN/Gwalior, @infodeaofficial
Millions of families with college-age children face a difficult choice. As school after school announces that it will welcome students back to campus this fall, many classes perhaps the most may continue to be held online.
A survey of college students in the spring found that about 75 percent were disappointed with the online learning experience during the lockdown.
As a tuition-paying parent of a student at a small (and inexpensive) liberal arts college, I learned that my family gets the best bang for our buck when our daughter engages directly with her professors, her classmates, and the material.
And as a professor myself, I am keenly aware of how hard it is to sustain this kind of engagement while students learn at a distance.
In the classic tutorial system, students do most of their learning in small sessions that include the professor ( or an assistant) and just a few other students. The students are expected to work actively with the material as they engage critically with the Instructor and one another.
Discussions and additional reading are tailored to student’s abilities and interests. Courses may also include larger lectures and traditional exams, but the tutorials are where the main action happens.
The universities of Oxford and Cambridge in England employ the classic tutorial system, and some aspects are practiced by small Colleges.
A modified tutorial system could foster a more rewarding learning experience online. Professors could record lectures on video for later viewing, annotate them with required and supplemental readings, and then schedule live video tutorials with, say, four, or five students each.
This style of learning might sound more challenging than sitting passively in a lecture hall, and it is. But research consistently shows that active learning leads to better learning.
Online tutorials would be a natural fit for smaller colleges. Larger universities, with their stadium-style lectures courses, might find the transition more challenging