What Is Blended Learning?
Blended learning is a term increasingly used to describe the way e-learning is being combined
with traditional classroom methods and independent study to create a new, hybrid
teaching methodology.
It represents a much greater change in basic technique than simply adding
computers to classrooms; it represents, in many cases, a fundamental change in
the way teachers and students approach the learning experience. It has already
produced an offshoot – the flipped classroom – that
has quickly become a distinct approach of its own.
No single,
reliable definition of blended learning exists, or even a universal agreement
on the term itself. Many use terms like hybrid, mixed, or integrative to
describe the same trend. But the trend is significant. In 2000 an estimated
45,000 K-12 students took an online course, but almost a decade later more than 3 million took
courses that way, many of them using computers in the schools themselves.
A learning model in three
parts
There is a
general consensus among education innovators that blended learning has three
primary components:
·
In-person
classroom activities facilitated by a trained educator.
·
Online
learning materials, often including pre-recorded lectures given by that same
instructor.
·
Structured
independent study time guided by the material in the lectures and skills
developed during the classroom experience.
·
A
course created in a blended learning model uses the classroom time for
activities that benefit the most from direct interaction. Traditional education
(especially at the college level) tends to place an emphasis on delivering
material by way of a lecture, while in a blended learning model lectures can be
videotaped ahead of time so the student can watch on their own time. The
classroom time is more likely to be for structured exercises that emphasize the
application of the curriculum to solve problems or work through tasks.
An individual semester of blended
learning may emphasize classroom time at the beginning, then gradually increase
the amount of work that students do online or during independent study. Many
argue that class discussion boards, for example, are far more useful if the
participants have met face-to-face first.
The “flipped”
classroom, a more recent coinage, refers to classes that are structured almost
exclusively around a reversal of expectations for lectures and homework.
Students are expected to watch lectures online at home, and do homework while
they are in class.
Blended
learning redefining teaching roles
In some situations, the move to
blended learning has inspired educators to redefine traditional roles. The word
“facilitator” has emerged as
an alternative to “teacher,” bringing with it a slightly different focus. The
facilitator places an emphasis on empowering students with the skills and
knowledge required to make the most of the online material and independent
study time, guiding students toward the most meaningful experience possible.
Facilitators focus on four key areas:
o
Development
of online and offline course content.
o
Facilitation
of communication with and among students, including the pedagogy of
communicating content online without the contextual clues students would get in
person.
o
Guiding
the learning experience of individual students, and customizing material
wherever possible to strengthen the learning experience.
o
Assessment
and grading, not unlike the expectations for teachers within the traditional
framework.
By putting an emphasis on learning
through supervised activities, blended learning has proven to be very adaptable
to what some corporations are calling blended
training. Trainers can shift their focus from the delivery of knowledge to its
application, and companies spend less flying trainers around to oversee all
instruction in person.
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