A
few years ago, I joined an adjunct faculty discussion forum on Google
Groups. More of a lurker than a joiner,
I’d read some of the discussion threads if they interested me and ignored the
others.
The
forum was active for a while, then fell mysteriously dormant for the longest
time. I had pretty much forgotten about
it when the moderator sent a message asking if we would be interested in
reviving it. It’s been about three
weeks, with more than a dozen messages landing in my inbox each day. I’m still a lurker, but what’s being
discussed is alarming.
There
was some tension at first. In any online
forum you always have people who want to stir up drama rather than
contribute. In this case, a row came up surrounding
an admittedly ill-advised remark by the moderator describing adjunct working
conditions as slave labor. She was
called out by one member. The moderator
apologized for her poor choice of words, but as is so often the case with these
situations it was more about the complainant than the complaint itself. There were more recriminations followed by
more apologies. The kerfuffle ended when the offended colleague demanded to taken
off the mailing list.
That
initial unpleasantness aside, the forum topics have generally fallen into two
categories. The first category consists
of anecdotes and advice negotiating the unemployment insurance mess arising
from the large numbers of people out of work owing to the coronavirus pandemic. I’ve mostly ignored these posts since I’m
teaching a full (adjunct) load this summer and don’t qualify for UI.
Then
again, I should probably pay closer attention.
The second thread has to do with the steep learning curve experienced by
my colleagues new to online learning.
Our institution’s campuses will remain closed through at least the fall
semester. Official communications contain
dire warnings that faculty who fail to complete the distance learning training
course will have their fall offers of employment withdrawn.
This
requirement has inspired numerous angst-ridden exchanges. The fear some of them express is as palpable
as the written word allows. It isn’t as
much a matter of mastering the LMS and its bewildering array of features, it’s
also the state-mandated accessibility requirement that has everyone—myself included—anxious.
The
problem is that this is an under-supported mandate for adjuncts. We are strongly encouraged to add visual
media to our courses, but features such as Camtasia or DIY options like YouTube
have godawful self-generated closed captioning.
But you have to have closed captioning to comply with the accessibility requirement. So, a number of disheartened colleagues have had
to resort to manually adding the captions.
This is a labor- and time-intensive process when you’re prepping content
for a 16-week class. Similarly, we are
required to convert PDF files into more accessible formats and add “alt-tags”
to any images. Both are also labor
intensive though not to the despair inducing extent of creating and properly
captioning video content.
Naturally,
no course preparation work is compensated under our contract, though there have
been vague promises of a stipend for the newbies who finish training and build
a compliant course. Those of us who are
established online faculty must submit at least one course for review during
the fall. I have exactly one fully compliant
course, a shell I created two years ago and which passed muster but was never
assigned to teach. Like my colleagues, I
have my work cut out.
All
of this begs an existential question. Is
online instruction the effective equivalent of a live classroom? The COVID-19 crisis is providing clues. Since March, I have extensively interacted
via videoconference platforms such as Zoom, Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, and GoToMeeting. Six months ago, I’d only heard of the latter and
only then because they underwrite some the programs I listen to on NPR.
Zoom
is the preferred platform at my college, and at first it was kind of cool to
attend trainings and department meetings seeing coworkers’ faces arranged Brady
Bunch-style on my laptop screen. The
novelty wore off fast. After a while I
found myself switching off my camera, muting my mic, and going about my daily
business during trainings where the moderator’s screen was the focus point and active participation wasn’t required. I don’t
think I was the only one.
What
we’ve been left with is a shiny tech-dependent version of an old model, the
correspondence course. Back when, these courses were of mixed quality. Some programs,
such as the extension courses offered by land grant universities, were
respectable. Others, most often private
outfits advertising on matchbook covers and in the back pages of magazines, had
lesser reputations. A notorious example
was LaSalle Extension University, based in Chicago, which thrived in various guises
for over seventy years until it folded in 1982.
The
GI Bill and federal student financial aid multiplied the opportunities for
abuse. Some correspondence schools received
shameless celebrity endorsements; Bennett Cerf, Rod Serling, and Phyllis
McGinley shilled the Famous Writers School.
The Famous Writers School, the subject of an exposé by Jessica Mitford
in The Atlantic, deliberately misled its applicants, 100% of whom were
accepted, that these renowned authors would personally evaluate their
work. (FWS continued to feature Cerf in
their print ads well after he died.)
The
completion rates for FWS students, many of whom received federal financial aid,
were abysmally low. One FWS official told
Mitford that the school wouldn’t be profitable if every student finished. After Mitford’s article, the Famous Writers
School lost much of its enrollment, limped along for a few years, and
eventually closed.
Such
past abuses notwithstanding, federal financial aid is still a cash
cow for unscrupulous for-profit operators.
The occasional scandal, such as the one surrounding Corinthian Colleges,
still erupts, while some self-proclaimed institutions of higher education are
too big to call to account. (The
University of Phoenix, National University, Grand Canyon University, et al.,
come to mind.)
There
have been precursors of online courses stretching back to the 1950s with NYU’s Sunrise
Semester TV program. My own
institution offered two-credit courses built around TV programs for many
years. You watched the episodes at home and
went to campus at your convenience to take exams. (For a few weeks in middle school I faithfully
got up at the crack of dawn to watch a series on the history of Mexico. I found out much later that this was one of
the TV courses.) The college currently
has two dedicated cable channels for instruction, but they are used sporadically.
Television
wasn’t a panacea, however. Sunrise
Semester was an extension program and the two-credit classes I described
weren’t widely accepted for transfer. But
they did afford options for nontraditional students.
A
generation ago, the idea of web-based instruction was a dubious
proposition. I first came across it in
the late 1990s, when it was part of my job to confirm the accreditation of high
schools attended by applicants to our employment training program. This was merely a check-the-box exercise if
they had attended local public schools or established private schools.
When
faced with an applicant enrolled in a private online school, I was in turn
faced with a conundrum. Until then I didn’t
know online schools existed. In fact,
there were no accreditation provisions for them at the time. I phoned the virtual school’s principal, who
invited me over to his brick and mortar office to discuss.
The
principal was a pleasant older gentleman who assured me that web-based
instruction was the future. Being a) new
to the very idea, and b) hamstrung by my employer’s policy that schools be
actual places, I offered my skepticism.
He demonstrated one of the courses, navigating through one of the clunky
Web 1.0 browsers available then (probably Netscape or Mosaic). I was at once impressed and unconvinced.
More
than twenty years later I’m just as unconvinced, but I am in the minority it
seems. Considering that community
colleges such as mine cater to a wide cross-section of students, a long-term or
semi-permanent shift to distance learning might be a welcome change for many. I strongly suspect that it will be welcomed
by administrators as well. The college
can still collect the same tuition and fees with reduced overhead. Unused facilities could be repurposed and
monetized as office or commercial space.
Even
as students at pricey four-year universities are demanding tuition refunds
after their classes went remote, trade publications such as Inside Higher
Education are predicting that the pandemic will force many community
colleges to a mostly online format.
The
paradox is easy enough to resolve. If I
was paying out the nose to attend, say, Columbia, Penn, or Dartmouth, I would
expect the experience of campus life at those institutions. For their mostly affluent
student bodies college is a social experience, a lifestyle. By contrast, the largest identifiable subset
of community college students just want a diploma. For older and other nontraditional students,
school is just one part of their lives to juggle along with work and family. This may be disappointing for me and my fellow
liberal arts profs, but those are the facts on the ground (and in cyberspace).
There’s
just one remaining obstacle to our sudden and perhaps irrevocable shift to remote
learning, the digital divide.
I
discovered this in no uncertain terms after we went on lockdown. Our main campus is suburban and students in
the surrounding communities mostly have reliable internet service and cell
phone reception. I teach at two of our
satellite campuses. One is in the
well-heeled community where I live. Even
though it’s 85 miles from the mothership most of my traditional-demographic
students there are technologically well-connected to the college’s resources. Few of them fell behind because they couldn’t
access the course.
The
other campus presented a different story altogether. While situated in a picturesque small town, a
substantial number of students live in the surrounding hills. Not all of them have reliable home internet or
cell reception. A winter snowfall or
summer wildfire emergency could leave them without electricity for days or even
a week or two. A few, but still too
many, are homeless and did their work from the campus computer lab before the
lockdown.
Within
the first two weeks of the stay at home order, about a third of the class had
stopped participating online. The campus
administration attempted to ease the situation by affording wi-fi service in one
of the campus parking lots so people could work from their cars or while seated
outdoors. It’s unclear to me whether
this helped many students. Several of my
students ended up failing or earning a lower grade than they would have made
had on-campus instruction concluded normally.
The
funny thing is that we’ve been aware of the tech gap for a very long time. The Clinton administration floated the idea
of providing laptops to low-income families twenty-five years ago. In the present, my state’s governor has
pledged to remedy the digital divide problem but obviously that can’t happen
overnight. The deficiency’s implications
for education, K-12 and higher, are damaging.
The
folks who tout technology as the answer to all of society’s problems
conveniently omit how unevenly these solutions benefit people. I happen to find the altered landscape of
online instruction among COVID-19 discomfiting.
But for those who cannot scale the suddenly heightened obstacle of the
digital divide will have deep implications, not just for them but for our
society as well.
©
2020 The Unassuming Scholar
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