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Wednesday, August
30, 2000 Volume
43, Number 3
Home Schooled
A New Breed of Students Earn Their Masters Degrees
Online
By LORITA OLEARY
Katie White, a 40-year old
high school teacher and mother of three, didnt have a clue how she
would be able to go back to school so she could update her therapist credentials.
She lived far from the nearest university and didnt have a car.
Then, a coworker told her about a masters degree program in speech
pathology at CSUN.
I dont know how
I could have done it if (this program) hadnt been available. I might
have just fallen back on my nursing. It would have been too hard on my
family to go to the university, she said.
Instead of settling for second
best, White found herself in a one-of-a-kind program with 27 other California
students seeking a long distance education in speech pathology, the study
of human communication, its development, and its disorders.
Many students, like White,
have trouble attending classes on campus because of problems with work
schedules, long commutes, or family commitments. Recognizing the changing
needs of students and the growing interest in utilizing the Internet in
higher education, CSUN decided to offer a wider variety of courses in
upper division general education, said director of undergraduate studies
Robert Danes.
The online speech pathology
course was another way CSUN attempted to address this public policy issue
and meet the needs of society, said Steve Sinclair, chair of the department
of communication disorders and sciences. There are 240 accredited speech
pathology schools in the country, 14 of them in California, and CSUN offers
the only online masters degree curriculum, he said.
There is also a shortage of
seats in graduate school, which doesnt satisfy the demand of the
employer or the students who want to attend college, Sinclair said.
Licensed speech pathologists
are in high demand at schools, hospitals, nursing homes, clinics, and
in the private sector. The public school system alone employs approximately
95 percent of all graduates, Sinclair said.
There is also a community of
disabled people who need speech pathology. People with developmental disorders
in articulation, language delays, autism, or hearing impairment. Or acquired
problems caused by strokes, accidents, or dementia, said Randy Akers,
professor of communication disorders and sciences.
Speech pathologists evaluate
and treat these speech, language and cognitive deficits, as well as swallowing
disorders in children and adults, Akers said. Sinclair believes the teachers
and students in CSUNs online programs are pioneers in a new era
of learning that will create an online community of scholars.
This virtual
department isnt built with brick and mortar. The students dont
buy their textbooks at a bookstore. It presents a new way of teaching,
Sinclair said.
The online speech pathology
program started in May 1999 as a joint project between two collegesthe
College of Health and Human Development and the College of Extended Learning,
said Karen Green, extended degree coordinator and clinical supervisor
of communication disorders and sciences.
The Internet has drawn
us together as a global society. I think colleges will be doing more things
in conjunction with each other in the future, its not going to be
so isolated, she said.
The communication disorders and sciences professors develop the content
for the online program and then Extended Learning converts the lessons
into CD or videotape which are then sent to the students, said Green.
I would consider these
very nontraditional students. The main age is 36, primarily women, all
working, with families, she said.
Other teaching aids include
discussion boards, chat rooms, and group e-mail where Green said she could
talk to the students all at once, which she does frequently. Mike Stevenson,
executive director of the College of Extended Learning, got involved helping
to develop material for the program and to set up relationships with student
services.
There are unique needs
for admissions because the students never show up at campus, he
said.
A web team, that is mostly
students, input the course materials on the web and then serves as technical
support for the students.
Its a major commitment.
Once the university takes on the program they have to see it through to
completion
putting extra resources into the program so its
repeatable, Stevenson said.
Now with the second set of
online graduate students enrolled, White has her first school year behind
her and admits it has been a mostly positive experience. Aside from a
few computer glitches there is the advantage of working at your own time
schedule. Also, the CD Power Point lectures allow students to listen repeatedly.
The biggest drawback is procrastination.
Its easy to shove
schoolwork on the back burner. You have to be independent. Its a
lot of self-teaching. Instructors provide the tools but you have to do
it yourself, White said.
Sinclair agrees that online
students must develop a high level of self-motivation.
You cant imagine
how much I admire these students. They must have the tenacity to go home
after work and switch on the computer, Sinclair said.
Ed Hall, one of the programs
professors, admitted there was trepidation at first.
The students were estranged
from the faculty, but then they formed the hyper news page and formed
groups and soon we felt we knew these students better than we did the
ones in the classroom, he said.
Hall has applied the new knowledge
and teaching techniques hes gained from his online classes to his
campus classes and has found it a stimulating and growing experience.
There is a tremendous
need for this in the community. It is the wave of the future
like
a tidal wave thats coming, Hall said
CDS
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