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TURNING BACK THE PAGES

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Title: TURNING BACK THE PAGES


1
TURNING BACK THE PAGES
  • AACIS HISTORY THROUGH ITS NEWSLETTER

Presented by Elizabeth Houdek Ohio University
St. Louis, Missouri November 2008
2
In the Beginning . . .
  • The American Association for Collegiate
    Independent Study is a new professional
    association for all those engaged in, or
    interested in, collegiate independent study. The
    goal of the organization is to provide
    professional development opportunities as well as
    opportunities for collegiality and interaction.
    It will be a one-person, one-vote organization. .
    . . It will encourage personal commitment,
    cooperation and sharing.
  • the Studyguide, V.1, No.1, Winter 1993

3
By the time of the first AACIS conference in
Columbia, Missouri, we had . . .
  • A set of goals
  • Bylaws for vote by the membership
  • An organizational structure of officers and board
    of directors
  • An e-mail listserv
  • An incorporated organization
  • 320 members
  • the Studyguide, Fall 1993

4
More Notable Dates
  • First AACIS Web site, 1997
  • AACIS takes over the Independent Study Research
    Report that was discontinued by UCEA, 2001
  • AACIS archives established at Ohio University
    (housed in Alden Library), 2004
  • AACIS Oral History project begun, 2006
  • the Studyguide (newsletter) becomes a searchable
    news blog, 2008

5
Perennial Concerns
  • The impact of electronic technology on every
    aspect of our programs
  • Quality assurance in instructional materials and
    methods
  • Student services in the distance environment
  • Faculty, administrative, and institutional
    relationships
  • The effects of the wider environment on our
    students and our programs

6
Mastering Technology . . . Or Is It Mastering Us?
  • When the road forks, you should go ahead and
    take it Yogi Berra
  • When the first AACIS conference was held in
    Columbia, Missouri, in 1993, Bruce Heasley
    presented a session on Penn States electronic
    mailbox system for lesson delivery and response.
  • In the Summer, 1994, issue of the Studyguide, Deb
    Gearhart (Penn State) wrote an article about
    Successfully Planning the Future for technology
    and the independent learner. In that same issue,
    Mike Lambert (National Home Study Council)
    outlined some of the Road Hazards on the Super
    Highway of On-Line Learning

7
Technology (2)
  • Jeff Zuckerman (University of Minnesota) asked
    Is It Time to Apply the Brakes to CAI when
    we build our courses around new technology, are
    we building walls around our programs? . . . Who
    will benefit? Who will be empowered, or
    disenfranchised? And finally, are these courses
    better or just flashier?
  • In 1995, the first trickle (later to become the
    flood) of magazine articles discovered distance
    education made possible by computers, the
    Internet, and the Web.
  • AACIS conferences were including a technology
    track for programs to share information, best
    practices, and cautions.

8
Technology (3)
  • The Helen Williams award for the best collegiate
    course in 1997-98 was given to a Web-based course
    Health and Lifestyle Management from Brigham
    Young University the first so honored.
  • The Fall, 2001, issue of the Studyguide announced
    that the entire high school program (48 courses)
    at the University of Texas-Austin was available
    online. The University of Nebraska announced its
    schedule for adding 10 online courses to its high
    school program.
  • From the Summer, 2005, Studyguide By the
    Numbers It took radio 38 years to reach an
    audience of 50 million people. It took TV 13
    years to reach an audience of 50 million. It took
    the Internet only 4 years to reach a user base of
    50 million people 2 years later it was
    accessible to double that number.

9
Ensuring Quality in Instruction
  • Although quality is an essential aspect of
    everything we do, it is particularly an issue in
    instructional materials, partly because it is the
    most tangible product of our programs.
  • AACIS has its roots in a series of annual
    workshops created for the professional
    development of members of the Independent Study
    Division of NUCEA (now UCEA). The first of these
    was held in Dallas, Texas, focusing on
    independent study course development and delivery.

10
Ensuring Quality (2)
  • As reported in the Winter, 1994, Studyguide, two
    sessions devoted to instructional design/course
    development at the first AACIS conference focused
    on (1) helping faculty understand the nature of
    independent learning and preparing them for their
    role, and (2) setting goals for an independent
    study high school curriculum.
  • In 1995, although e-mail and other computer
    resources were beginning to be used for lesson
    transmission and return, course guides were still
    primarily print-based. An article in the
    Studyguide discussed principles of graphic design
    and communication as they applied to course
    materials.

11
Ensuring Quality (3)
  • In the Fall, 1999, issue, Thomas Edison State
    College described a new certificate program for
    distance learning faculty, a set of seminars
    devoted to various aspects of preparing course
    materials and teaching online.
  • Course design, curriculum development, and
    faculty support are always timely topics at every
    AACIS conference. Since the advent of the World
    Wide Web, these sessions increasingly deal with
    course development in the online environment.
  • AACIS recognizes the importance of courses with 3
    awards Helen Williams award for a college-level
    course, Monty McMahon award for a pre-collegiate
    course, and the Ron Malan Course Developer award
    for individual achievement.

12
Supporting Student Success
  • Student services are one of the tripod supports
    of a sound distance education program. It is
    especially important because we seldom have
    face-to-face contact with our learners.
  • AACIS Student Services award recognizes staff in
    our distance learning organizations who go above
    and beyond to meet the special needs of learners
    at a distance.
  • Independent study high school students have
    special concerns, in part because of state
    requirements about number and distribution of
    credits.

13
Student Success (2)
  • The Winter, 1995, Studyguide highlighted a panel
    discussion from the 1994 AACIS conference with
    representatives of 4 major independent study high
    school programs, and a commentary on the natural
    partnership between home schooling and
    collegiate independent study.
  • In the Spring, 1996, issue, Neil Howe (ND Div. of
    IS) describes the North Dakota experience with
    providing middle-school courses for distance
    learners.
  • By the time of the 1998 AACIS conference,
    sessions on student services were already
    suggesting the power of electronic communication
    and the Web to deliver student services in new
    and powerful ways.

14
Student Success (3)
  • The Summer, 2003, Studyguide introduces AACIS
    members to the Illinois Virtual Campus online
    support services for students, including IVCs 40
    centers around the state providing face-to-face
    services and the IVCTutor, an online resource
    using tutors available by e-mail, student
    bulletin boards, or live chat.
  • Jesse Hicks (N.D. Div. of Ind. Study) chronicles
    her experience as a distance learning instructor
    who becomes a distance learning student in the
    Spring, 2004, issue of the Studyguide. Taking a
    distance education course has changed the way I
    think about my students.

15
Faculty, Administrators, and Institutions
  • Our choice is often do you want to be ignored .
    . . or excoriated? (Von Pittman)
  • Our independent study/distance learning programs
    are embedded within institutions that are often
    ambivalent partners in our mission.
  • The Spring, 1993, Studyguide contained a
    cautionary tale from Deborah Hillengass (U. of
    Minnesota) about a routine review by the
    sociology department of its courses taught
    through independent study that, 6-1/2 months
    later, resulted in the discontinuation of all
    that departments IS courses.

16
Institutional relations (2)
  • In the Winter,1994, issue an article by Shari
    Zenor Kiple (U. of Iowa) describes the
    tightrope often walked by IS programs about how
    to promote your product or service without
    raising the hackles of your institution over
    issues like cost, perceived promises, or
    availability to on-campus students.
  • However, Patricia Sparks (St. Josephs College),
    in the Summer,1994, issue, describes how a
    careful and thorough strategic planning process
    allowed the Distance Education program to assume
    a more central role and an enhanced mission
    within its institution.

17
Institutional relations (3)
  • In the Winter,1996, issue we are introduced to
    LionHawk, the collaborative effort between Penn
    State University and University of Iowa to use
    their external degree programs to enable students
    with an associate degree from either institution
    to enroll in a baccalaureate program at the
    other. The 1995 AACIS conference at Estes Park,
    CO, also featured a panel discussion from
    representatives of four universities about the
    advantages of such cooperative programs.
  • Budget woes in many institutions summarized in
    an article in the Summer, 2003, Studyguide made
    life difficult for independent study/distance
    learning programs.

18
Institutional relations (4)
  • Although the Studyguide has not made specific
    mention of them, various sessions at AACIS
    conferences in recent years have highlighted some
    successes
  • Independent study/distance learning programs have
    helped their institutions transition into the
    world of online learning, reach out to new
    audiences with degree-completion programs, or
    manage enrollment vs. resources issues.
  • Some distance learning programs have been
    revitalized or given new prominence by the
    changing student demographic (increasingly older,
    increasingly part-time).

19
AACIS in the Wide World
  • AACIS has always had international members Papua
    New Guinea, Australia, Canada, South Africa (the
    Studyguide, Fall,1993), and international
    outreach (Spring,1998)
  • AACIS members and their programs have been
    directly affected by several challenges over the
    years, including accreditation and state
    regulations (Spring,1993) the virtual
    university (Fall,1996) terrorism (Fall,2001)

20
In the Wide World (2)
  • So, in this time when collegiate-based
    independent study/distance learning programs are
    under pressure from inside and outside our
    institutions, what is our value and our strength?
  • Our value is the imaginative, fervent commitment
    we have to serving our students, the integrity of
    our policies and processes, and the quality of
    our learning materials.
  • Our strength is the caring and the commitment we
    have to one another as colleagues and as friends.

21
Some Familiar Names
The following are just a sampling of AACIS
members who are mentioned in various issues of
the Studyguide
  • Steve Wright
  • Mary Jane Mahony
  • Emory McLendon
  • Clyde the Guide
  • David Brigham
  • Kerri Garcia
  • Ron Malan
  • John Robinson
  • Kathy Peil
  • . . . Is YOUR name there??
  • Roger Young
  • Monty McMahon
  • Von Pittman
  • Joyce Nielsen
  • Mary Beth Almeda
  • Neil Howe
  • Ron McCrory
  • Bill Manning
  • Kristin Evenson Hirst
  • Jane Hancock

22
AACIS Conference Themes
  • 1992 Quality Assurance in Independent
    Study Chapel Hill, NC
  • (Not actually AACIS, was the last Independent
    Study Workshop)
  • 1993 Planning for Success Columbia, MO
  • 1994 Networking Sharing Growth
    Development Penn State, PA
  • 1995 A Peak Experience Estes Park, CO
  • 1996 Reflecting the TimesA Time for
    Reflecting Minneapolis, MN
  • 1997 Creating New Traditions Athens, GA
  • 1998 Bridging the Distance Davenport, IA
  • 1999 Challenges for the New Century Baton
    Rouge, LA
  • 2000 The Future of Independent Study in the New
    Tech Age Austin, TX
  • 2001 Independent Study Traditions and
    Transformations Athens, OH
  • 2002 Independent Learning Branding the
    Educational Frontier Reno, NV
  • 2003 Distance Learning Pioneering the
    Future Sioux Falls, SD
  • 2004 Navigating the Winds of Change Bellingham,
    WA
  • 2005 Harvesting the Promise of Distance Learning
    Champaign, IL Emerging Trends and Practices
  • 2006 YAll Come! Catch the Future of Distance
    Learning Tunica, MS
  • 2007 Independent Study At the Junction Ogden,
    UT
  • 2008 Follow the Road to Independent Study (Rte
    66) St. Louis, MO
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