How do I count thee? Let me count the ways?

How easily can you be identified on the Internet?

How easily can you be identified on the Internet? Suppose you finish your meal at a restaurant, you are about to pay the check, and t...

Showing posts with label for-profit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label for-profit. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

First post - please be gentle

Hi.  It's probably about time that I join the blogging world.  I have been teaching online college math for about four years.  I started out with pre-algebra, worked my way up the math hierarchy, and now mostly teach college algebra and statistics.

I teach for several for-profit colleges.  Sometimes "for-profit" has a poor reputation.  I am not involved in the recruiting, advising, and counseling end of education, and perhaps this poor reputation is not undeserved.  But as an analogy, I never like dealing with car salesmen, but I still drive a car.

The first question I asked during my first interview was how does an online school know its students are not cheating.  Unless there is some in-person proctoring by a certified third-party (which is possible - I have taken online courses as a student that did this), an online school can not know.  But plenty of cheating goes on in a brick and mortar school too, from paying someone to submit assignments and using cell phones or crib sheets during exams, so please don't be "holier than thou."

I have two bases of comparison of my online courses at online schools versus the content of brick and mortar schools.  The first is that my son who attends a state university took a very similar statistics course to the one I teach.  Although my course is fewer weeks than his, my course seems to cover approximately the same topics.  Second, I recently took an online liberal arts course as a student at a different state university, and I was decidedly unimpressed with how little my professor was involved in the class, how infrequently she communicated with students, and how she apparently didn't read the students' posts at all because she never commented on some of mine which clearly exceeded that scope of the course.  So I have some confidence that my online students are not getting an inferior education.

I look forward to sharing some of my online math experiences, discussing math and teaching, and learning from this vast blogging community.