Inside Higher Ed's 2013 Survey of Faculty Attitudes on
Technology -- conducted with Gallup -- aims to understand how college and
university faculty members and campus leaders in educational technology
perceive and pursue online learning and other emerging opportunities for
delivering course content. Highlights of the survey findings include:
- Few faculty believe that online courses can achieve student learning outcomes as well as in-person courses.
- Whether an online program is offered by an accredited institution tops the list of factors that contribute to quality in online education according to faculty members. Technology administrators are far likelier to associate quality with academic credit.
- Faculty members feel strongly that institutions should start MOOCs only with faculty approval, and that MOOCs should be evaluated by accrediting agencies.
- Of faculty who have never taught an online course, 30 percent say the main reason they haven't is because they've never been asked.
- Faculty members and technology officers alike agree that their institutions fail to reward teaching with technology in tenure and promotion decisions.
On Thursday, September 12 at 2 p.m. Eastern,
join Inside Higher Ed editors Scott Jaschik and Doug Lederman for
a free webinar. Scott and Doug will lead a lively discussion sparked by
the results of the survey and questions/comments from participants.
Click to Register
Read up before you participate! Check out Inside Higher Ed's article on the survey and download the complete report at: www.insidehighered.com/news/ survey
The Inside Higher Ed Survey of Faculty Attitudes on Technology was made possible in part by the generous financial support of Deltak, McGraw-Hill Higher Education, Pearson and Sonic Foundry. Your registration information will be shared with these companies.
Click to Register
Read up before you participate! Check out Inside Higher Ed's article on the survey and download the complete report at: www.insidehighered.com/news/
The Inside Higher Ed Survey of Faculty Attitudes on Technology was made possible in part by the generous financial support of Deltak, McGraw-Hill Higher Education, Pearson and Sonic Foundry. Your registration information will be shared with these companies.