Internet Learning Volume 5, Number 1, Fall 2016/Winter 2017 | Page 34

Internet Learning Volume 5 Number 1 - Fall 2016/Winter 2017 We are the Campus: Using the University of Edinburgh’s Manifesto for Teaching Online to Provoke Dialogue about Online Learning in the US Nancy Heath, American Public University System Abstract In this article, the Manifesto for Teaching Online, a document created through an iterative process by students and teachers in the MScC in E-learning Programme at the University of Edinburgh, is presented. The goal of the Manifesto is to provoke discussion, and to “rethink some of the orthodoxies and unexamined truisms” (Ross, 2012) surrounding the field of online teaching. Written in the style of a manifesto (or even a meme, discussed below) the Scottish document purposefully eschews formal learning theory or traditional research. Each point of the Manifesto is “deliberately interpretable”, underlining its authors’ roles as provocateurs (Ross, 2012). This article discusses both pros and cons of the Manifesto, but ultimately embraces the notion that intellectual activity which prompts questions and illuminates paradigms is a positive good. Keywords: Manifesto for Teaching Online, digital education, online learning Introduction In 2016, about 5.8 million U.S. students took college classes offered either partially or fully online. Online education enrollments at universities are growing faster than place-based enrollments, with the likelihood that online students will make up close to 25% of all higher education enrollments by 2020 (WCET, 2016). Kathleen S. Ives, Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director of the Online Learning Consortium, noted that distance education enrollments are on the rise, whereas overall higher education enrollments are declining. She suggests that this is a “shift in the American higher education landscape” (Online Learning Consortium (OLC), 2016), as learners lean toward online options. Online education’s rise from obscurity to prominence has been swift, and the medium is no doubt still in its infancy. Internet-based teaching is still for the most part firmly rooted in the models and assumptions of place-based classroom learning. There is usually one 33