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Representing Extramural Students

Over the last few weeks I have been focusing my representational work on the issue of access and the issue of quality of provision. These two areas have the potential to affect many extramural students over the next few years.

Will extramurals find a place in the tertiary system?

The access issue has been discussed before (Limited Extramural Places) but there has been more discussion in the media. An article about our youth having nowhere to go for education and one about places for extramurals with comment about how minority groups such as Maori could be disadvantaged.

A document discussing the issue of academic quality has  been presented to Massey. Here I outline areas where I feel the University needs to focus as it deals with the advance of blended learning. It is a wide ranging document that discusses the impact of blended delivery on the quality of provision as percieved by students. I have attached it below if you are interested in what I am saying to Massey’s policy makers.

Blended Learning Experience – Students Perspective May 2011 DRAFT 

1 comment to Representing Extramural Students

  • Kent

    Hi Ralph,

    I read your Blended Learning Experience paper and can’t decide whether to be amused or disappointed. I have been struggling with one of my recent papers and its complete lack of online support and I have been trying to find an avenue to get the whole thing overhauled (which led me here), but I didn’t think that the inability to submit assignments on-line was a luxury. And I didn’t think that lecturers considered answering queries on-line a burden on their time. The idea that “students perceiving themselves a (sic) customers” has come on since the introduction of fee paying might be valid (although I would argue that was the case long before then), but that would still leaves something ridiculous like 20 years for the university to respond to that. 20 years – and it is still worth mentioning because the faculty hasn’t got it?

    Maybe I am tech-literate and expect too much, but I think Massey should be embarassed with their use of on-line resources. The library is functional, but I find little else adds any value to my courses (even the Massey website is a dog to navigate with dead links and obscure paths to information). I had one paper (152.200) which really used Stream to its advantage – and I think it allowed those without internet access to keep up. A great example. I am now doing 152.300 and I can’t submit assignments on-line, the paper coordinator won’t check on Stream, and hasn’t answered some e-mail queries, and when he does respond it is with confusing answers. Worst extramural paper I have ever done.

    I have some suggestions.

    I am paying $500+ for a paper (over roughly 12 weeks?). There are certainly dozens, possibly hundreds of others doing the same paper. The idea that the university cannot find someone to spend 10-20 hours a week to dedicate to answering website queries speaks volumes about the regard extramural students are held as customers. One of the first things often said in a training course is that if you ask a question, five other people are probably thinking it. So I would expect that answering queries to all on a web forum surely benefits the entire class?

    So first suggestion is for paper coordinators to engage on-line with all students – this will reduce the dependence on contact courses (which people like me cannot attend) and remove the ridiculous one-on-one email conversations (which are probably chewing the paper coordinators time answering the same question over and over) unless it is for things like assignment extensions etc.

    Other ideas:
    Train staff.
    Create some standards for Stream use and measure the coordinators on their use of the tool.
    Tie it into paper coordinator performance agreements. Incentivise, reward or punish.
    Make standards adherence a KPI of reporting units (is it schools at Massey?).
    Do the little things so staff know it is important – offer rewards for new ideas, showcase the good stuff, put it on the agenda of all department meetings, learn from mistakes, management should talk about it, invite students to talk about it, have an avenue for students/lecturers to complain – and then respond to complaints etc etc.

    I could go on-and-on, the truth is I am so dissillusioned I am thinking of tossing Massey in as a waste of my time and finding a university that values me as a student, that wants me to succeed and accepts that they have a role in my success. Telling me to buy a book, read it and show up for an exam is a cop-out.

    Cheers
    Kent
    ps Sorry for the emotional rant, but this is really annoying me.

    Can you suggest people on the faculty I can also whine to about this?

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