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Anthony (Tony) Picciano – City University of New York

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Presentation on theme: "Anthony (Tony) Picciano – City University of New York"— Presentation transcript:

1 Seeking Evidence of Impact in Blended Learning: New Models, Designs, and Results!
Anthony (Tony) Picciano – City University of New York Charles (Chuck) Dziuban – University of Central Florida Charles Graham – Brigham Young University

2 Presentation outline Introduction Background Key report findings
Issues and the future

3 The beginning Nov – “Blended Learning” discussed at Sloan-C Conference April 2003 – First Sloan-C Workshop on Blended Learning March 2007 – Blended Learning Research Perspectives published “If you are an administrator or faculty member who wants to do blended learning well, this is an important resource that integrates theory, research and experience.” - Diana Oblinger (2007)

4 The beginning continued…
April – 10th Sloan-C Workshop on Blended Learning Nov – Blended Learning Research Perspectives (Vol. II) “The research explored in this volume, spawning engagement, pedagogical practice, and learning outcomes, will ensure that blended learning is well understood and of high quality.” - Diana Oblinger (2013)

5 Authors and contributors
Over 100 authors and researchers willing to contribute 57 individuals were selected to contribute (23 faculty, 16 administrators, 6 research assistants, 6 instructional designers/developers, 3 consultants, and 3 students) Represent a variety of educational institutions (public & private, small & large, national & international, as well as K-12 schools) One shortcoming: No researcher from a community college.

6 Scope of the book 21 chapters, 376 pages
6 chapters provide insights into issues (models, methods) related to blended learning research. 15 chapters provide results of empirical studies. 578 citations 105 tables and figures

7 Organization Introduction Blending learning models & scale Evaluations
Faculty issues Studying non-traditional learners International perspectives Blended learning in K-12 Conclusion

8 Research methodologies
Quantitative, qualitative and mixed research methodologies: Quasi-Experimental Course, Program, and Multi-institutional Evaluations Discourse Analysis Case Study Survey Extensive Focus Group Responses/Observation PAR (Participatory Action Research) Data Mining of Institutional Databases Phenomenography

9 Some findings

10 Models and teacher roles Hoxie, Stillman, & Chesal – NYC DOE Blended Learning in New York City
Flex vs Rotation Models Faculty more satisfied with rotation than flex approaches Creator vs Utilizer Teachers Faculty creators of online content were more positive about blended learning and its impact than those who were only utilizers of online content

11 Scaling blended learning Moskal & Cavanagh – UCF Scaling blended learning evaluation beyond the university NGLC grant to scale PD to 20 AASCU institutions. 20 campuses 79 unique courses (217 total sections) 131 faculty 5798 students Study examined Student satisfaction of BL instruction Faculty evaluation of BL instruction Student completion (93%) and success (64%) rates Challenges with scaling BL in a short time-frame

12 Workload Ryan, Tynan, & Lamont-Mills – Australian universities; Out of hours: Online and blended learning workload in Australian universities Exploration of 4 work allocation models (WAMs) interviews with 25 faculty and staff 4 universities represented Reporting Workload policies for blended learning Perceptions of workload models Management of e-teaching workloads Future implications

13 Informal blending Bloemer & Swan Investigating informal blending at the University of Illinois Springfield On-ground only Online only Informal blending On-ground only Online only Informal blending

14 Informal blending Average course loads Withdrawal rates Undergraduate
On-ground only 12.8 10.0 Informal blending 13.1 11.1 Online only 9.9 8.7 Withdrawal rates Withdrawal rates in %

15 Faculty development Ginsberg & Ciabocchi A review of current faculty development practices in traditional, not-for-profit higher education institutions Survey of faculty from 109 institutions Faculty Development trends Popular types Delivery modes Incentives Successful elements Recommendations

16 Faculty development Percentages
Data from study: Range of incentives used for faculty development

17 Issues and the future

18 Blended Learning: The ideal instructional model
Join us for a learning circle Oak Alley 3:45 – 4:30 pm A Second Generation Agenda Evidence of Impact

19 A prototype blended learning model – or is there?
Which is the best example of the category bird? Penguin Robin Ostrich

20 Blended learning as a boundary object
Evaluators Journalists Provosts Faculty Blended Learning Librarians Students Deans

21 Psychological contracts
The important stuff may be what you can’t see

22 Features of psychological contracts
Voluntary choice Belief in mutual agreement Incompleteness

23 Psychological contracts
An individual’s beliefs regarding reciprocal obligations Then this is what I’ll get If I do this… Non-ambivalent = Simple Ambivalent = Complex

24 For more information contact:
Dr. Tony Picciano Dr. Chuck Dziuban Dr. Charles Graham


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