Years past I taught high school English and community college computerology but 
these days I give workshops on ukulele playing techniques. I recently came upon 
an on-line university along the lines of wiki called Udemy. It's stated purpose 
is to disrupt the education system. I have decided to plunge into it. I created 
a coupon for pen-l folks who want to check it out (for free). Just go to 
http://www.udemy.com/play-ukulele/?couponCode=Penl153624   It expires June 12.

Dan Scanlan

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 8, 2012, at 7:56 PM, michael perelman <[email protected]> 
wrote:

> Shortly after reading John E. Chubb and Terry M. Moe's "Higher
> Education's Online Revolution" (op-ed, May 31), I received two emails.
> One, from my department chair, informed me that due to the popularity
> of my upcoming online summer school class, I was being offered the
> "opportunity" to turn it into a "megaclass" with an enrollment cap
> lifted from 60 to 90 students. My compensation would increase by
> $1,200 (i.e., $40 per student) to a total of $5,712. (Were I teaching
> such "megaclasses" online full time, after 21 years as a teacher, I
> would be earning $68,544 a year.)
> 
> The other email was from a former student requesting a letter of
> recommendation—one of the many uncompensated, time-consuming tasks
> that teachers have, and mostly fulfill, willingly. He had come to see
> me the past week so that I could refresh my four-year-old memory of
> him and his excellent work in the classroom, which included an
> exemplary final exam essay that I had critiqued and returned to him.
> 
> When Messrs. Chubb and Moe write that their "revolution" includes a
> concept of "face-to-face interactions" within a "community of
> scholars," they ignore the reality of what's going on. There is no way
> I will have much, if any, "face to face" interaction with 90 online
> students. And there is no way, period, they will have "face to face"
> interaction with each other. There is also no way I would have the
> time to read and critique 90 weekly essays, a midterm and a final
> paper, much less discuss them "face-to-face."
> 
> What's really going on is the outsourcing of the educatonal experience
> to for-profit corporations that provide testing and technical
> tools—sometimes excellent, sometimes badly flawed—to those involved in
> education.
> 
> What's being lost is the human dimension, a key to elucidation,
> inquiry, informed thought and education since, well, Jesus and
> Socrates, to name only two.
> 
> Larry Bensky
> 
> California State University, East Bay
> 
> Hayward, Calif.
> 
> -- 
> Michael Perelman
> Economics Department
> California State University
> Chico, CA
> 95929
> 
> 530 898 5321
> fax 530 898 5901
> http://michaelperelman.wordpress.com
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