海角社区

Online courses a cure-all? Think again, says 海角社区 study

As tuitions rise and students take longer to complete an undergraduate degree, the pressure is on higher education leaders and policymakers to provide a more efficient path to degree for students. Offering more online courses has been touted as a possible solution.

A recent 海角社区 study comparing community college student performance in online versus traditional, face-to-face instruction sounds a cautionary note.

In an exhaustive study of student performance in the California Community College system, the nation鈥檚 largest with 2.3 million students per year, 海角社区 education researchers found that students鈥 grades and rates of completion are lower in online courses than for the same courses offered in person. In all, they studied 217,000 first-time entrants to the community college system from 2008-09 through 2011-12.

鈥淲e found the same pattern of results across all course types,鈥 said Cassandra Hart,  assistant professor in the 海角社区 School of Education, who conducted the study with education doctoral students Michael Hill and Elizabeth Friedmann.

Students fared even worse in online formats when taking courses outside the regular academic calendar and when enrolled in courses where a relatively low share of students enrolled through online sections. The researchers also found large gaps for courses in mathematics and humanities (which include English language arts). Finally, they found that women face a slightly larger performance gap than men.

鈥淭he consistency of our results is important from a policy perspective,鈥 says Hart. 鈥淧olicymakers in California and other states are interested in exploring whether online courses can be used to expand instruction and improve outcomes, but there may be costs to this strategy.鈥

They suggest that a more formal cost-benefit analysis be done to see if course noncompletion or failure offset possible cost savings of online courses. They also make recommendations for improving outcomes in the short-term, including limiting the number of online sections offered during the summer; having faculty implement course policies and practices that would help them detect student disengagement; and introducing students to study and time-management strategies for online formats.

Hart, Hill and Friedmann presented their study at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association in Chicago on Saturday, April 18.

Media Resources

Karen Nikos-Rose, Research news (emphasis: arts, humanities and social sciences), 530-219-5472, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu

Donna Justice, School of Education, (530) 754-4826, dljustice@ucdavis.edu

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