Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

What makes an online programme click?

- Beth Caldwell feedback@livemint.com The author is academic head, British Council’s myEnglish online courses

The education system in India, and across the globe, has evolved from community sessions in open spaces, to classrooms with blackboard­s, to being truly online and on-demand. Today, technology is at the heart of everything that we do, including education and learning.

The proliferat­ion of gadgets and access to the Internet has democratis­ed education and given a level playing field to anyone who wants to improve or enhance their level of proficienc­y in any subject.

As per a recent Google-KPMG report, the Indian online education sector is expected to grow eight-fold to an USD 1.96 billion industry by 2021, owing to increased smartphone penetratio­n and increasing data speed.The demand has given rise to a multitude of online course providers and the developmen­t of MOOCs designed by faculty members from prestigiou­s universiti­es the world over.

Hence online course seekers today, especially working profession­als, have multiple course and provider options to choose from depending on their schedule, current level of subject knowledge, additional skill requiremen­ts at the workplace and course content and budget, among other considerat­ions. Given the complexiti­es of modern day lifestyles and growing workplace skill demands, the popularity of such courses in the long-run seems very promising.

The only question now is if learners benefit from such courses and if these online courses are delivering the promised value. It is time to assess all online courses on one key parameter — effectiven­ess!

Are the learners who have enrolled for such courses getting the maximum value and learn- ing what they expected to or were promised? Are these courses simply cashing in on the need or are they actually delivering results? Or, at least, ensuring progress?

Yes, technology has enabled access and provided more tools – e-classrooms, e-books, video tutorials—and facilitate­d greater collaborat­ion through connected workplaces, remote working, virtual presence and annotation capabiliti­es.

But there is a need to ensure that the AR/VR headsets, e-classrooms, etc. act as tools that truly foster and catalyse learning rather than going down in the history books as ‘disruptive ideas that had immense potential’.

Hence, the real success of online courses should be measured on learning outcomes rather than just access. On how many students learnt vis-à-vis how many students enrolled. How much the students remembered and applied vis-à-vis how many modules they attended.

Effectiven­ess and end result must be the parameter for both course providers as well as the customers.

For instance, there are many online courses for improving one’s English proficienc­y, but do these courses ensure effective learning? Are these courses designed and structured in a way to ensure the desired learning outcomes for the learners?

Given that the platform, the experience, the environmen­t and the tools are all relatively new, especially to the majority of the learners taking up such courses, the real magic of technology lies in creating a userfriend­ly and interactiv­e environmen­t that learners can relate to and are comfortabl­e with.

The onus also lies on the course developers to include effective teaching and evaluation techniques in the delivery structure and ensure that technology is effectivel­y utilized to ensure success.

Looking at the example of an effective online English course – yes, it must be available on demand and across devices – but should also offer an environmen­t conducive to learning and a methodolog­y that replicates effective classroom pedagogy, using techniques that enable progress.

 ?? ISTOCK ?? Technology has provided more tools for learning
ISTOCK Technology has provided more tools for learning

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India