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by Vicky Phillips, GetEducated.com
(Originally appeared in Salon Magazine, 1998)
On a recent business trip a man
asked me what I did for a living. I replied that I wrote and
taught college courses. "Oh?" said he. "Where do you teach?" A
peculiarly honest answer came out of my mouth before I could
think. "No where," said I.
It's true. Since 1990 I have
taught and counseled for what a friend of mine calls keyboard
colleges -- distance learning degree programs. Where I teach is
inside the electrically charged ether that lies between my phone
jack and the home computer of a group of far-flung, generally
older than average, college students.
In 1989, I designed America's
first online counseling center for distance learners. I've
worked since then with over 10,000 learners online. I've flunked
a few of them. I've never personally met any of them.
For want of a clearer
explanation of my career situation I tell the man who inquired
that I teach in cyberspace. "I'm a virtual professor. " I try
explaining. "Distance learning .... online degree programs ...
virtual universities."
The man's face remains as blank
as the sky on a summer day. I cannot tell whether he is silent
out of respect or keen confusion: I imagine both to be the case,
so I settle in to explain what I have to explain frequently
these days: the decline of the American college campus and the
rise of the American educational mind, as I see it.
Distance learning, or
educational programs where pupil and professor never meet
face-to-face, are not anything new. Sir Isaac Pitman of Bath,
England, hit upon the idea of having rural learners learn
secretarial skills by translating the Bible into shorthand, then
mailing these translations back to him for grading. This he
began doing in 1840.
I don't teach shorthand. I teach
psychology and career development. I write many of my own
lessons though, just as Sir Isaac had to do. My penny post is
the World Wide Web. I post assignments to electronic bulletin
boards and send graded papers across the international phone
lines in tariff free e-mail packets. I convene classes and give
lectures in online chat rooms when need be.
Is this a valid way to dispense
a bona fide college education? Can people learn without sitting
in neat rows in a lecture room listening to the professor or a
Sage on the Stage? Yes, absolutely. In fact, while many people
find it hard to imagine a college with no campus I nowadays find
it hard to imagine teaching anywhere other than the freedom that
is cyberspace. In cyberspace, I listen, read, comment, and
reflect on what my students have to say -- each of them in turn.
What they know they must communicate to me in words. They cannot
sit passively in the back row twiddling their mental thumbs as
the clock ticks away. They must think, and they must write.
Thinking and writing: what else but these things are the
hallmark of a classically educated mind?
I know my students not by their
faces or their seat position in a vast lecture auditorium (as is
the case on many campuses today), I know them by the words and
ideas they express in their weekly assignments that everyone
reads online. I am not a Sage on the Stage. I am a Guide on the
Side. Often what my students "say" or write to one another or
the way they incorporate their work and career ideas into their
papers and debates with each other is more practically edifying
than anything I could dish their way.
My average college kid is 40
years old. Not a few are in their 50s or their 60s. They are
telecommuting to campus because they could not or would not
uproot their careers and kids or grand kids to move to a college
campus -- an entity itself modeled after the learning
monasteries of medieval times.
Many of them know what they are
talking about; more so they know what they came back to college
to learn. A cyber-education suits them because it respects their
ability to define and execute what knowledge is for them. It
encourages them to argue in words their points and their
perspectives without the censoring of a professor who might be
tempted to step in to "calm down" or "refocus" an otherwise
wonderfully enlightening classroom debate.
The idea that the American mind
is best taught using a factory model -- where students sit in
neat rows, holding up their hands for permission to speak,
clock-watching their way through textbooks and lectures which
are broken into discrete knowledge widgets -- has never been
shown to be an effective way to learn. It has been shown to be a
convenient way for colleges to transcript that a standardized
body of knowledge has been dutifully delivered. The
American factory model. Everyone
on the assembly line is delivered the same standardized units of
information (re: lectures and textbooks); they then all must
pass the same quality inspection (re: objective exams).
Maybe teaching a liberal arts
curriculum via a virtual environment makes sense to me because
it harks back to what I learned to be a true liberal arts
education. Studying philosophy in Athens, Greece, I was taught
that to really learn anything one had to throw away their
textbooks and their notebooks. Throw away these memory tools --
in their place rely instead on one's native ability to
critically think through a situation.
I was taught what Plato knew to
be the nature of a true liberal education. It is independent of
time and place. Real education does not occur on a campus. It
occurs in the minds of the students. Good students eschew memory
-- a simple learning trick -- in favor of developing their
abilities to debate and argue their way through an issue. In
short, good students develop their abilities to fling words at
each other with amazing intellectual accuracy.
Plato and his students wandered
around Athens arguing their way into understanding. While my
cyber-students do have textbooks, their books are learning aides
-- not the only pool of knowledge they will drink from. Instead,
they will drink also from the collaborative efforts of online
debates, conferences, and papers. They will think about what
they have to say, and they will come to class each week
amazingly prepared to argue and type their way into insight.
The virtual university: oddly
enough it's just what a classicist like Plato would have
practiced had there been an Information Superhighway way back
when. Me? I'm in favor of less learning that takes places
on-campus and more learning that takes places in the minds of
the participants.

Vicky
Phillips is the founder of GetEducated.com, a consumer advocacy
group that researches, rates, ranks and verifies the credibility
of online college degree programs.
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