data-driven assessments and accountability efforts arent helping them improve the quality of teaching and learning at their colleges and universities, according to the 2016泭Inside Higher Ed泭. Instead, instructors and a large share of academic technology administrators say the efforts are mainly designed to satisfy accreditors and politicians not to increase degree completion rates.
It has been another tumultuous year in educational technology. The past 12 months have seen new ways to泭泭and泭,泭泭 promising to revolutionise teaching and research, and泭泭about the role of technology in and outside the classroom.
In the midst of those new developments, old concerns remain. Faculty members are still worried that online education cant deliver outcomes equivalent to face-to-face instruction. They are split on whether investments in ed tech have improved student outcomes. And they overwhelmingly believe textbooks and academic journals are becoming too expensive.
The findings also show faculty members are creating new opportunities with technology. Through experimentation with online education, for example, faculty members say they are able to serve a more diverse set of students and think more critically about how to engage students with course content, and with free and open course materials, they say they are increasing access to education.
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Inside Higher Ed泭teamed with Gallup to hear from faculty members and academic technology administrators on these and other issues. The survey results are based on responses from instructors and administrators from all over higher education public, private and for-profit institutions, from two-year colleges to major research universities. The final sample of 1,671 faculty members and 69 administrators who oversee academic technology is therefore meant to create a representation of higher education as whole.
The free report can be downloaded泭. Other highlights include:
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- Fewer administrators and faculty members this year said technology in the classroom has led to significantly improved student outcomes, and more of them are having a harder time justifying investments in ed tech.
- Faculty members are conflicted about the scholarly publishing landscape. About half of surveyed instructors said they have more respect for research published in subscription journals than in open-access journals, but on the other hand, they strongly believe subscription journals are too expensive, for individuals and libraries alike. They are also concerned about adequate compensation for authors and peer reviewers.
- Both administrators and faculty members believe colleges are taking appropriate steps to protect personal information and intellectual property from cyberattacks. Few believe those security measures infringe on their privacy.
- Even in this unusually polarised election year (or perhaps because of it), most faculty members arent taking to social media to talk politics. In fact, most faculty members dont even talk about their scholarship on social media.
Data disillusionment
Colleges collect troves of data. When students log in to their learning management system, when they earn a grade in a course and when they check in with their adviser, each event creates a data point. By connecting that data to other information gathered about students, colleges hope to become more informed about where they are excelling and where they are falling short. And beyond using the data for evaluating the past, colleges are building data models for the future, for example by being able to flag when students are headed down a path that could lead to them missing an intended graduation date or dropping out.
This years survey asked administrators and faculty members to consider the efficacy of data-driven assessment efforts. The responses suggest a sense of disillusionment among administrators and faculty members about whom those efforts are meant to benefit.
Only about one-quarter of faculty members (27泭per cent) and one-third (34泭per cent) of administrators said the efforts have improved the quality of teaching and learning at their institutions. Similar proportions of respondents said the same about the impact on degree completion rates. In comparison, nearly two-thirds of faculty members (65泭per cent) and about half of administrators (46泭per cent) said the efforts are meant to placate outside groups such as accreditors and politicians.
Faculty members responses to another question may explain why so few of them feel the assessment efforts are having a measurable impact. More than half of the instructors surveyed (54泭per cent) said they dont receive data gathered by their colleges meant to help them improve their teaching. Only 24泭per cent said they do.
The responses also revealed that many respondents feel faculty members arent being properly included when colleges plan how they will use the assessment tools. Only 37泭per cent of faculty members, backed by 38泭per cent of administrators, said they play a meaningful role in those conversations. The remaining respondents either disagreed or said they werent sure.
Administrators and faculty members didnt agree on everything, however. Most administrators (75泭per cent) said meaningful discussions are taking place at their colleges about how assessment data should be used, but a plurality of faculty members (38泭per cent) disagreed. None of the administrators surveyed disagreed strongly.
Ed Venit, a senior director at the Education Advisory Board, a research and consulting firm based in Washington, said the results are an example of that all-too-familiar dynamic between administrators and faculty members.
Once again you have these two groups that dont seem to be on the same page, Venit said in an interview.
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The issue isnt simply that administrators and faculty members arent communicating with one another, Venit said, adding, Its an ownership issue.
The EAB runs the Student Success Collaborative, a membership organisation for colleges and universities using data-assisted research to improve student support, retention and graduation rates. Venit said the best examples of institutions that have closed the gap between administrators and faculty members are colleges that have recruited the expertise available on campus statisticians, social scientists and others both to determine how data should be used for assessment purposes and to evaluate the efforts.
It enfranchises them, Venit said. It brings them into the fold.
Publishing: Compensation, Price and Respect
The proliferation of open-access journals publications that dont charge a subscription fee has increased the diversity of the scholarly communications landscape and given researchers new outlets to publish their work. Not all of the growth has been beneficial to scholars, however. Open-access publishing has also enabled predatory journals, which scam authors out of publication fees while offering them little in the sense of peer review or prestige.
Predatory publication has泭泭in the past five years, according to a recent study. This fall, the Federal Trade Commission泭泭on publishers that mislead authors.
This years survey included a new section on scholarly communication that explored faculty members views on publishing and their interactions with journals, including whether where an article is published affects their opinion about the work.
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Overall, faculty members are divided on the question: they either say they have more respect for scholarship published in subscription journals (49泭per cent) or that it doesnt matter where the research is published (48泭per cent). The gap was at its widest among tenured faculty members, 56泭per cent of whom said they favoured research published in subscription journals. Very few faculty members said they have more respect for scholarship published in open-access journals (8泭per cent).
Heather Joseph, executive director of the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, a group in favor of open access, said she wasnt surprised that faculty members said they have more respect for scholarship published in journals with subscription fees. Not only do those journals benefit from having been around much longer than open-access journals, she said, but they are also closely tied to high educations traditional incentive structures.
Higher education institutions and the research enterprise as whole typically emphasise publication in subscription access journals in the research evaluation, promotion and tenure process, Joseph said in an email. If a faculty member is more likely to be rewarded for publishing in a subscription access journal, I would think their level of respect for those titles cant help but be affected.
But if open-access journals have a respect issue, subscription journals have a price issue. Faculty members said journal prices are prohibitively high, both for individual subscribers (82泭per cent) and academic libraries (70泭per cent). The survey did not ask faculty members if they believe the publication fees charged by open-access journals are too high.
Whatever qualms faculty members have with subscription journals are not enough for them to support the idea of a boycott, though. About one-third of respondents (31泭per cent) said professors should refuse to publish an article in a traditional journal unless they were simultaneously able to publish the article in an open-access journal. Tenured faculty members were especially opposed to the idea, with 48泭per cent of respondents opposing it.
Faculty members also signalled their dissatisfaction with how authors and peer reviewers are compensated for their work. About two-thirds of respondents said journals dont provide adequate compensation (65泭per cent for subscription journals, 63泭per cent for open-access journals), while those saying they do numbered in the single percentage points.
That finding points to a systemic issue that cuts across all journals, no matter which business model they follow, Joseph said. It begs the question of revisiting the incentives that faculty are given by [higher education] and research institutions; perhaps at least discussing the notion of faculty being credited for their peer review work in the promotion and tenure process is an idea whose time may finally have arrived.
Beyond publishing, the question of whether to use social media for scholarly purposes泭 faculty members. Like last year, a plurality of respondents (42泭per cent) said social media isnt a good way for professors to communicate with the public, and about two-thirds of them (63泭per cent) are concerned about attacks on scholars who are active on Facebook, Twitter and other platforms.
Most faculty members (70泭per cent) said they are staying away from social media altogether, though some use it to express their views on their scholarship and teaching (10泭per cent), politics (5泭per cent) or both (15泭per cent).
Impressions of Online Education
Faculty members surveyed for previous editions of this report have traditionally been overwhelmingly sceptical about the ability of for-credit online courses to produce outcomes equivalent to face-to-face education. This years sample is no different: a majority of faculty members (52-60泭per cent) said student outcomes from online courses are worse, even if they were in charge of teaching the courses themselves.
And like last year, faculty members who have taught online disagree. About half of them (47泭per cent) say online courses can be just as good as face-to-face courses. (The proportion of respondents who said they had taught an online course rose markedly this year, to 39泭per cent, up from 32泭per cent last year and 33泭per cent in 2014.)
Yet faculty members who have taught online share some concerns with those that dont - especially when it comes to student interaction. In response to questions that dig into specific features such as grading assignments and communicating with students, a majority of faculty members with online teaching experience said it is more difficult to interact with students outside of class, reach at-risk students and maintain academic integrity in online courses than in face-to-face courses. Those findings were also virtually unchanged from last year.
Justifying Ed Tech Investments and Other Selected Findings
Unlike last year, however, administrators and faculty members arent as certain that investments in and use of educational technology in the classroom have led to significantly improved student outcomes. Last year, the first time these questions were asked, faculty members said by a roughly two-to-one margin that gains in student outcomes justified colleges spending on ed tech. This year, faculty members are more evenly divided: 57泭per cent said yes, 43泭per cent no.
A majority of faculty members (70泭pe rcent) still believe technology in the classroom has led to improved student outcomes, but most of them describe the gains as slight rather than significant. Still, the proportion of faculty members who said ed tech hasnt improved student outcomes at all this year ticked up a few percentage points, rising to 30泭per cent from 25泭per cent last year.
The decline is more pronounced among administrators. They, like faculty members, also believe ed tech has improved student outcomes (87泭per cent gave that response), but far fewer of them this year said the gains have been significant (15泭per cent this year, 35泭per cent last year). However, it should be pointed out that with such a small sample of administrators, larger swings are to be expected.
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- Faculty members generally give high marks to their colleges when it comes to technical support, but they are less impressed by other kinds of institutional support for online learning. Just about half of respondents said colleges provide adequate support for creating (49泭per cent) and teaching online (47泭per cent), and a plurality (40泭per cent) said they are fairly compensated for that work. When it comes to providing incentives to encourage instructors to teach online or acknowledging the time demands for those who do, a majority of faculty members said their colleges can do better.
- Most faculty members who have taught online courses, 79泭per cent, say the experience has helped them develop skills and practices that have improved their teaching in the classroom as well as online. Eighty-six泭per cent say they think more critically about how to engage students with content. Eighty泭per cent also say they make better use of multimedia content, and 76泭per cent say they better use their learning management system.
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