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Teaching Graduate Level Epidemiology on the Internet – Lessons Learned

The emergence of the Internet represents “the death of distance.” That’s how one observer at SER boldly described the significance of the Internet. This “death” is likely to have far reaching consequences in business, education and other fields.

Tom Songer, University of Pittsburgh Assistant Professor of Epidemiology, predicts there will be a strong emphasis on continuing education in the next century with less emphasis on degree programs. And, continuing education students are different from traditional students in wanting to study in their own time, according to Songer. Consequently, Internet-based training is preferable over other forms of distance education formats. Songer believes epidemiologists located in academic settings will likely be approached to teach their course(s) in a distance education format in the near future—if they have not been approached already.

Songer has something to offer his colleagues since he has been teaching epidemiology on the Internet for four years now, including courses on injury and chronic disease epidemiology. Speaking at a special evening session on the Future of the Internet at the recent SER meeting, Songer described what it is like to teach on the Internet and shared some of the conclusions he has reached. These have been summarized on his website at: http://www.pitt.edu/~tjs/teaching/internet/index.htm

How do you use the Internet for teaching?

Songer finds four existing models but adds that there is no best model and teachers can be creative. The models are:

1) Courses given only through the Internet, i.e. There is very little face-to-face contact between the teacher and student. Some have little or no teacher contact with the student while others have active teacher to student communication via the net.

2) Courses heavily focused on the Internet but including face-to-face contact between the teacher and student in the classroom. This contact supplements the Internet and is used to review key discussion items.

3) Courses that rely primarily on the classroom but include the Internet to supplement the instruction. This includes giving students web sites to visit and/or providing the lecture materials on the Internet for later reference.

4) Courses that use the Internet sparingly, i.e. putting the class syllabus online.

Assuming you choose a model which is based mostly on the Internet, what kind of materials do you need?

Songer advises creating lectures using Microsoft Powerpoint which consist of a series of slides each with an icon or graphical image and a short narrative which states the key points to be made from that slide. Powerpoint has a feature which can convert slides into a HTML presentation suitable for the web and each slide constitutes a different HTML page on which students can point and click. Alternatively, teachers can place all of their lecture materials on one homepage. This makes the lecture easier to print. Adding hypertext links in the narrative is also recommended as is using other features of the Internet such as email, discussion groups, listservs, and file transfer capabilities. For example, some statistics courses use file transfer functions to obtain databases for use in class.

Songer believes that teachers, as in the regular classroom, must be equally if not more attentive to whether or not the students are understanding the material being presented. This cannot be known immediately as in a regular classroom, but teachers need to build in some interaction to make this assessment. To probe the students, Songer has used exercises at the end of the lectures such as multiple choice or essay questions and web-based assignments (his preference) which require a student to obtain information from another site on the Internet and answer questions on it in the context of the lecture. Interactive discussion groups are another means of probing the students as are listservs which allow all of the students to see and read the questions and responses from faculty and students.

As in regular teaching, lectures must be updated each year. On the Internet, this means checking that any hypertext links used in the past are still active and that the pages referred to are still suitable in scope and content. In fact, information technology continues to change at a rapid pace and teachers have to be alert to the possibility that what works today may be outdated tomorrow because of new methods and capabilities being introduced.

Overall, Songer seems upbeat about teaching on the Internet and sees advantages in students being able to learn from other students in far away places who do not always do things the same way. Students grow and you see that, he says. On the downside, face-to-face contact is lost in an all Internet course and it is more difficult to determine if students are really understanding the material, according to Songer. Also, there is not the “high” from delivering a good lecture, and the investment of time is different. You must invest more in preparation of the structure and narrative for your slides than in a regular classroom situation. “Having a helper would be very useful,” says Songer.

Other special problems which may come up when teaching on the Internet have to do with procedures for verifying that an assignment was submitted on time. Also, making sure that student identities are not being faked may be important.

Published July 1998 

 

 
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