http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/19/study-finds-that-online-education-beats-the-classroom/Study Finds That Online Education Beats the Classroom
By STEVE LOHR
New York Times
AUGUST 19, 2009, 1:08 PM
A recent 93-page report on online education, conducted by SRI International for the Department of Education, has a starchy academic title, but a most intriguing conclusion: “On average, students in online learning conditions performed better than those receiving face-to-face instruction.”
The report examined the comparative research on online versus traditional classroom teaching from 1996 to 2008. Some of it was in K-12 settings, but most of the comparative studies were done in colleges and adult continuing-education programs of various kinds, from medical training to the military.
Over the 12-year span, the report found 99 studies in which there were quantitative comparisons of online and classroom performance for the same courses. The analysis for the Department of Education found that, on average, students doing some or all of the course online would rank in the 59th percentile in tested performance, compared with the average classroom student scoring in the 50th percentile. That is a modest but statistically meaningful difference.
“The study’s major significance lies in demonstrating that online learning today is not just better than nothing — it actually tends to be better than conventional instruction,” said Barbara Means, the study’s lead author and an educational psychologist at SRI International.
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This NYT article from 2009 is more optimistic about online education than the recent NYT editorial. The article refers to
this study:
http://www2.ed.gov/rschstat/eval/tech/evidence-based-practices/finalreport.pdfEvaluation of Evidence-Based Practices in
Online Learning: A Meta-Analysis and
Review of Online Learning Studies
U.S. Department of Education
Office of Planning, Evaluation, and Policy Development
Policy and Program Studies Service
Revised September 2010
Prepared by
Barbara Means
Yukie Toyama
Robert Murphy
Marianne Bakia
Karla Jones
Center for Technology in Learning
Abstract
A systematic search of the research literature from 1996 through July 2008 identified more than
a thousand empirical studies of online learning. Analysts screened these studies to find those that
(a) contrasted an online to a face-to-face condition, (b) measured student learning outcomes, (c)
used a rigorous research design, and (d) provided adequate information to calculate an effect
size. As a result of this screening, 50 independent effects were identified that could be subjected
to meta-analysis. The meta-analysis found that, on average, students in online learning
conditions performed modestly better than those receiving face-to-face instruction. The
difference between student outcomes for online and face-to-face classes—measured as the
difference between treatment and control means, divided by the pooled standard deviation—was
larger in those studies contrasting conditions that blended elements of online and face-to-face
instruction with conditions taught entirely face-to-face. Analysts noted that these blended
conditions often included additional learning time and instructional elements not received by
students in control conditions. This finding suggests that the positive effects associated with
blended learning should not be attributed to the media, per se. An unexpected finding was the
small number of rigorous published studies contrasting online and face-to-face learning
conditions for K–12 students. In light of this small corpus, caution is required in generalizing to
the K–12 population because the results are derived for the most part from studies in other
settings (e.g., medical training, higher education).