Wednesday, December 20, 2017

AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Senate Passage of the GOP Tax Plan

For Immediate Release
December 19, 2017


Contact:
Marcus Mrowka
202-531-0689



AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Senate Passage of the GOP Tax Plan
 
WASHINGTONStatement of AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Senate passage of the GOP tax plan:

“Candidate Trump promised a tax plan with cuts for the middle class and tax increases for the wealthy. Now President Trump, with the help of House and Senate Republicans, is set to sign into law a tax bill that hits middle-class families with a tax increase and delivers 83 percent of the benefits to the top 1 percent. That’s not populism, that’s plutocracy.

“The American people called Congress, rallied and made clear that they overwhelmingly oppose this bill. Study after study showed how this bill would benefit the wealthy at the expense of the middle class, blow a hole in the deficit, rip healthcare away from millions of families and starve local public schools and services. Some CEOs even admitted that corporations wouldn’t use their tax breaks to create jobs or raise wages. But big donors and the rich demanded a tax break, and Trump and Republicans in Congress delivered. And as the bill made its way through Congress, even though we were able to mitigate some of the damage through our activism, the deal actually got sweeter for those at the top.

“Trump and Republicans in the House and Senate declared with this tax bill that they stand with their donors and the wealthy, and they will stop at nothing to create a new Gilded Age. They declared whose side they’re on, but next fall we the people can take matters into our own hands and vote for a new Congress that will stand with the working and middle class.”





Tuesday, December 19, 2017

AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Passage of the GOP Tax Bill

For Immediate Release
December 19, 2017

Contact:
Marcus Mrowka
202-531-0689
mmrowka@aft.org
www.aft.org

AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Passage of the GOP Tax Bill

WASHINGTON—Statement of AFT President Randi Weingarten on the passage of the GOP tax bill:

“This isn’t tax reform; it is simply the largest transfer of wealth to those at the top in generations—at the expense of working and middle-class Americans. President Trump may have campaigned as a populist, but with his support Congress rammed through a tax plan in which 83 percent of the benefits will go to the top 1 percent by 2027, and where Americans earning less than $75,000 a year will be paying more for this tax cut to the wealthy. That is why most Americans oppose it.

“America is supposed to be about lifting all boats and giving everyone a shot at the American dream. Instead, President Trump and congressional Republicans are creating a new Gilded Age that prioritizes the wealthy over wage earners. Not only does this bill give massive tax breaks to the wealthy and corporations at a time of record profits, and on a day the Dow opened to another high, but Republicans will pay for these breaks by raising taxes on working people and slashing the deduction for state and local taxes, which will cut funding for public schools, police, and fire services. They even use this tax bill to make it harder for the people of Puerto Rico to recover from the devastation of Hurricane Maria and build a vibrant economy on the island. And House Speaker Paul Ryan, Sen. Marco Rubio and others already have said they will use the deficits they’re creating as an excuse to cut Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.

“Most Americans want tax reform—not tax largess and cuts that overwhelmingly benefit the wealthy. When Republicans fear their donors more than voters, it's time for voters to take matters into their own hands and put people in office who will bring lasting tax relief to the middle class."

AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Trump Administration Banning the CDC from Using Certain Words

For Immediate Release
December 17, 2017
Contact:
Marcus Mrowka
202/531-0689





AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Trump Administration
Banning the CDC from Using Certain Words

WASHINGTON—Statement of AFT President Randi Weingarten on news that the Trump administration is banning the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from using certain words:

“First came alternative facts, and now the Trump government is banning words. Authoritarians limit speech and attack knowledge. What’s next? Banning books? This is 2017: We value diversity, care for the vulnerable, and believe in science and evidence; entitlements offer a needed safety net; and no one should pretend fetuses or transgender people don’t exist. This move to ban words is undemocratic, violates the First Amendment, and flies in the face of scientific and academic standards and research. We must fight it.”



Friday, December 15, 2017

AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Fifth Anniversary of the Sandy Hook Shooting

For Immediate Release
December 14, 2017

Contact:
Marcus Mrowka
202-879-4733 Cell: 202-531-0689
mmrowka@aft.org
www.aft.org

AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Fifth Anniversary of the Sandy Hook Shooting

WASHINGTON— Statement of AFT President Randi Weingarten on the fifth anniversary of the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.:

“Today we remember the educators and young children who were violently gunned down in their classrooms five years ago in Newtown. We remember Charlotte, Anne Marie, Josephine, Dawn, Daniel, Caroline, Avielle, Ana, Rachel, Madeleine, Jessica, Catherine, Victoria, Noah, Benjamin, James, Emilie, Mary, Lauren, Allison, Chase, Dylan, Jesse, Olivia, Jack and Grace. We remember the courageous actions by educators and school staff to save their students by hiding them in closets and bathrooms, helping them flee out of windows and shielding them with their own bodies. We remember the school custodian who ran ahead of the gunman locking classroom doors to keep him out and keep people safe. We remember the pain and the mourning. We remember how the community of Newtown united to heal and support one another, and the work of our local unions to make sure teachers, school staff and children had the supports they needed to treat their trauma, feel safe and secure, and allow them to get back to teaching and learning. And we also remember the inaction by lawmakers to prevent people from having easy access to deadly assault weapons.”

Thursday, December 14, 2017

AFT’s Weingarten on FCC’s Ending of Net Neutrality

For Immediate Release
December 14, 2017

Contact:
Andrew Crook
202-393-8637 Cell: 607-280-6603
acrook@aft.org
www.aft.org

AFT’s Weingarten on FCC’s Ending of Net Neutrality

WASHINGTON— Statement of AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Federal Communications Commission’s decision to end net neutrality:
 

“Today is a shameful day because the FCC’s decision will widen inequality, lessen opportunity and hurt kids. The FCC voted for profit over the public good.

“Think about the nurses who won’t be able to download medical images to treat patients, the university faculty and graduate employees denied access to non-commercial research, the teachers without access to free lesson sites like Share My Lesson that help kids, and the public employees destined to queue behind private businesses.

“Absolutely no one—besides massive corporations and their lobbyists—asked for this change. The FCC’s Republican appointees have ignored their job to put the public interest first. Equal access to the internet is a right, not a privilege extended only to the rich while the rest of America battles in the slow lane, a principle that three of five FCC members ignored.”

QUESTIONS REGARDING LETTERS ABOUT DRUG PRESCRIPTIONS

QUESTIONS REGARDING LETTERS ABOUT DRUG PRESCRIPTIONS

MAPE members and dependents have been receiving letters from CVS Caremark notifying them that important changes effecting their medications would take place starting Jan. 1, 2018. CVS Caremark will begin managing our employee and dependent prescription benefit plan Jan. 1.
The change indicates that medication(s) being taken by the letter recipient will be considered non-preferred under your new prescription benefit plan. This means that the medication is either going up in cost or is not being covered resulting in the employee or dependent paying 100 percent of the cost. The problem is, the letter does not distinguish between whether the coverage no longer exists, or the copay amount is changing. In some cases, there may not even be an increase in the cost of the prescription.
The letter encourages members to contact their doctors directly to determine if a preferred medication is available or to visit the CVS/Caremark website to assist in finding a preferred medication. Unfortunately, your doctor will not know what medications are preferred and covered, and your visit to the website will unlikely determine which medication you could switch to. There is also no way to indicate whether your current medication is going up in cost or not being covered without actually contacting CVS Caremark.
If you received this letter, we urge you to contact CVS Caremark’s SEGIP line at 1-844-345-3234 with all your questions. You will get a recorded greeting and then a pause. A trained staff will then answer the call and be able to assist you by looking you up by name and birthdate.
By having CVS Caremark as the state’s single pharmacy benefit manager, it is projected to save employees $30 million to $40 million per biennium in additional increases in employee out-of-pocket costs. We urge you to work with your doctor and CVS Caremark to find a covered prescription that will treat your condition and provide the best savings to you.

AFT’s Weingarten on GOP tax ‘deal’

For Immediate Release
December 13, 2017

Contact:
Andrew Crook
607-280-6603
acrook@aft.org
www.aft.org

AFT’s Weingarten on GOP tax ‘deal’

WASHINGTON—AFT President Randi Weingarten issued the following statement condemning the GOP’s conference committee tax deal:

“I didn’t think it was possible, but the Republicans have managed to use their conference committee to make the tax bill even sweeter for the rich and worse for working families.

“People in the top tax bracket are now getting even more money. Corporations got the alternative minimum tax tossed. But middle-class families are still left with a state and local tax ‘deal’ that’s still going to raise their taxes while cutting important local services like public schools, police and firefighting.

“And you don’t need to take just my word for it. Even Marco Rubio can’t understand why they’re able to keep giving more money to the rich and corporations while they can’t give any bigger credits to families.

“This entire process has been a sham to hide the bill from the American public. It needs to be slowed down so people can actually read what is in the final deal, and it shouldn’t be voted on until Doug Jones is seated.”

AFT Leaders on Doug Jones’ Win in Alabama

For Immediate Release
December 13, 2017

Contact:
Andrew Crook
202-393-8637 Cell: 607-280-6603
acrook@aft.org
www.aft.org

AFT Leaders on Doug Jones’ Win in Alabama

BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—Joint statement by Jefferson County AFT President Marrianne Hayward, Alabama State University Faculty-Staff Alliance Co-president Derryn Moten, Birmingham AFT President Richard Franklin and American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten on Doug Jones’ election to the U.S. Senate:

“Decency and respect triumphed last night in Alabama. Doug Jones campaigned on a commitment to improve people’s lives, undergirded by the values of equality and opportunity. He exposed the false promises, empty rhetoric and moral corruption of his opponent. Alabamians responded across party lines, turning out in record numbers to stand up for their state and their communities. This result is a repudiation of hatred and divisiveness and a victory for democracy and civility. Doug Jones will be a valuable addition to the Senate, and the AFT will have his back as he advocates in Washington for the righteous principles and policies he’s fought for all his life.”

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

REVIEW & COMMENT - Board Policy 1B.3 Sexual Violence Policy - Responses due January 15, 2018

This information is being sent to you on behalf of our Chief Diversity Officer, Clyde Pickett.
_________________________________________________________________________________

Colleagues,

The proposed amendment to Board Policy 1B.3 Sexual Violence Policy is available for review and comment.  The policy draft is located on the P&P review site at https://mnscu.sharepoint.com/sites/policy/SitePages/Reviews.aspx.  Please log in using your [StarID]@minnstate.edu and your regular password. All feedback and comments may be submitted and viewed through this site.

Any questions on the policy or how to leave a comment can be referred to Gary Hunter at gary.hunter@minnstate.edu or 651-201-1659.

Responses are requested by January 15, 2018.


Sincerely,

Clyde Wilson Pickett, EdD
Chief Diversity Officer
Office of Equity and Inclusion
Minnesota State
30 East 7th Street, St. Paul, MN 55101

o: (651) 201-1472 | www.MinnState.edu

Tuesday, December 12, 2017

AFT President on the Deadly Attack on UN Peacekeepers

For Immediate Release
December 12, 2017

Contact:
Richard Fowler
202-393-6355
rfowler@aft.org
www.aft.org

AFT President on the Deadly Attack on UN Peacekeepers

WASHINGTON— AFT President Randi Weingarten on the devastating, unprecedented and deadly attack on United Nations peacekeepers in the Democratic Republic of Congo:

“Every day, brave men and women around the world who serve the United Nations work to secure peace in some of the world’s most dangerous conflict areas. These international civil servants, including the Blue Helmets, do what is hard, fight for what is just and put themselves in harm’s way to ensure that we live in a world that is free from war, genocide and other atrocities.

“We are heartsick with grief for the families of the fallen peacekeepers. The horrifying news of the 15 U.N. peacekeepers killed and 40 wounded in the DRC—the worst single loss for the United Nations since 1993—should cause pause for citizens around the globe and should force us all to fight for a world that is peaceful and just.

“The staff of the United Nations—international civil servants—play a critical role in maintaining international peace and security, protecting human rights, delivering humanitarian aid, promoting sustainable development and upholding international laws. This work is vital to our common security and human development and requires support from our elected leaders and our appointed diplomats who serve throughout the world. Let us use the memory of our 15 fallen brothers and sisters to fight back against any attempt to decrease U.S. support and resources to the United Nations, and fight forward to end austerity measures that will hamper the U.N. effort globally.”

Monday, December 11, 2017

A strategy for online education - Full Report - November 2017

November 2017

Advancing Online Education in Minnesota State
A strategy for online education

Full report

Background
The 2017 “Advancing Online Education in Minnesota State” report was prepared by the Online Strategy workgroup, an ad hoc workgroup chartered by Minnesota State’s Leadership Council. The ad hoc workgroup convened from January 2017 through August 2017 and was comprised of appointees from each of Minnesota State’s collective bargaining unions. The final report was submitted to the Minnesota State Leadership Council for review and adoption in October 2017.

This complete report includes a total of forty-two (42) action steps aligned with fifteen (15) distinct strategies that support four broad goals to (1) collaborate across institutions in ways that increase (2) access to and the (3) quality of online opportunities that remain (4) affordable for students compared to other higher education providers.

Minnesota State institutions have their own history of defining and organically growing “online education.” For meaningful progress to occur, the authors of the report have recommended prioritizing action steps that can make substantive improvements to the existing ways we operate, rather than attempting to “wipe the slate clean” and make large transformational changes on behalf of all Minnesota State institutions. Such transformational changes are hard to accomplish in the short-term and frequently run counter to the historical missions of public, non-profit entities like Minnesota State institutions. Such innovations are not discouraged within Minnesota State; instead, the workgroup believes individual institutions are best positioned to pilot such experiments as they can nimbly adapt to the changing needs of students.

Addressing all forty-two actions included in this report would be an unmanageable undertaking for Minnesota State and it’s institutions in the short-term. The authors of this report have used an asterisk (*) to identify the nine action steps the workgroup believes the campuses should consider over the 2017-2018 academic year, with an intention to begin implementing action steps during the 2018-2019 academic year.























Defining Online Education

The term “online education” has been used as a blanket phrase for a number of fundamentally different educational models. Phrases like distance education, e-Learning, massively open online courses (MOOCs), hybrid/blended learning, immersive learning, personalized and/or adaptive learning, master courses, computer based instruction/tutorials, digital literacy and even competency based learning have all colored the definitions the public uses to define “online education.”

For the purpose of this report, strategies and action steps were developed in ways that define “online education” as having the following characteristics:

• Students who enroll in online courses or programs may reside near or far from the campus(es) providing the course(s) or program.
• A student’s course load may include offering where attendance is required in person or where an instructor/students are not required to be in the same geographic location.
• Students may enroll in one or more individual online course offerings provided by one or more institutions to that may or may not satisfy degree/program requirements.
• Student may pursue a certificate, program, or degree where a substantial number of courses, perhaps all, are taken without being in the same geographic location as others.

The authors of this report agree that institutions should continue to explore and pursue a variety of models for delivering education, but this report does not address or offer strategies for each of these. Each model of education engenders a specific method used to approach education and is accompanied by its’ own list of strengths, weaknesses and opportunities.

Organization of this Document

In fall 2016, each Minnesota State campus submitted responses to a set of open ended questions that asked campuses to describe how they were currently addressing issues related to and/or planning for online education. Campuses were also asked to provide feedback and/or suggest what Minnesota State could do collectively to support online education efforts. These questions were divided into four broad categories including access, quality, affordability and collaboration.

Responses to this questionnaire were analyzed by the Organizational Effectiveness Research Group (OERG), which is managed by a nationally recognized Graduate Program in Industrial/Organizational Psychology at Minnesota State University, Mankato.

The ad hoc workgroup was provided with the analysis from the OERG (see Appendix A), the raw data responses from each campus, and a qualitative dataset (see Appendix B) provided as context to common, and often erroneous assertions made about the state of online education in Minnesota State. Data included were demographics of students enrolled in online courses, the performance of these students, the levels and fields of study by students enrolled in online courses, and amount of online course offerings that currently take place throughout Minnesota State.

Additional reports, resources and data from national associations, like EDUCAUSE were also made available to the workgroup for consideration.

As the workgroup considered strategies that could advance online education, they were asked to use the primary and secondary sources listed above to support the fifteen (15) strategies that were developed. The workgroup then developed a set of action steps they believed should be pursued in order to advance each corresponding strategy.

Each action item was further categorized for its potential to positively impact student outcomes, compete against other higher education providers, and/or its potential to make online education more efficient or effective. The intention to categorize these action steps is to help align each action item with an intended purpose.

Goals

For the purpose of this document, we define a goal as a broad aspirational outcome that we strive to attain. Four goal areas guide this document. These goal areas include access, quality, affordability and collaboration. Below is a description of each goal area and the assumptions made for Minnesota State.

1. Access - Our online education strategy must ensure students have broad access and success to higher education across the state

Online education is one of the ways in which Minnesotans can access higher education. Individual institutions and Minnesota State, as a whole, should make online education options and online services available to potential and existing students, in a manner that is consistent with other in-person educational options. Access efforts should include enrollment growth, intentionally attracting and recruiting students into Minnesota State for whom online education is the best or only educational option. In addition, institutions have online education as an appropriate augmentation to course options.

Over twenty percent of existing Minnesota State students enroll in online courses as a way to satisfy course requirements. For some students, online education is a convenient option; for others, online is the only option available. When confronted with limited options to complete required courses at their home institution, students who do not want to delay their academic progress, seek out online courses, which are not bound by a specific location or time.

At Minnesota State institutions, the majority of student enrollment in online education has been in individual online courses rather than completely online programs. For-profit and private non-profit institutions continue to be highly effective in recruiting potential Minnesota State students to enroll in online and flexible degree programs, largely because they are highly resourced and designed to cater to the needs of online students. For institutions that see online education as a way for Minnesota State to strategically grow enrollment.

2. Quality: Our online courses, programs, and services must be of consistent high quality across colleges and universities

Often times, the topic of quality is often raised as somehow being unique to online course. The Higher Learning Commission (HLC) accreditation guidelines review the standards and processes institutions have in place to ensure quality in all of educational offerings, including online. Individual institutions are best positioned to define, assess, and ensure quality in online education offerings. There are a number of ways in which institutions have demonstrated quality in individual courses and programs including the evaluation of course design, evaluation of instruction and assessment of student learning outcomes

3. Affordability - Online education must be affordable for our students with its value proposition clearly expressed

Ongoing financial and human resources that support the technical infrastructure, professional development, and student services are required for the continued success of online education. In order to support these efforts, almost all Minnesota State institutions choose to apply a differential tuition rate to courses that are offered online. If we intend to have online education continue to be an affordable solution for students, Minnesota State and its institutions must be good stewards of these funds and ensure these funds support online education.

Online education requires different or additional services that need to be funded; current tuition is not high even though it may not be affordable to all students; campuses are relying on tuition as operating revenue as currently established; brick and mortar costs stay constant even as more students take online classes; system and individual colleges and universities need to position themselves effectively within the market and that requires investment; transparency is important in tuition setting—students want to know why there is variability; benefit to consistent approach to setting tuition. Inherited certain models and approaches and may not be able to start from scratch

4. Collaboration - Our online education strategy must draw on our collective strengths and resources

There are existing collaborations related to online education throughout Minnesota State. Distance Minnesota is comprised of four institutions Alexandria Technical & Community College, Bemidji State University, Northland Community & Technical College, and Northwest Technical College) which collaborate to offer student support services, outreach, e-advising, faculty support, and administrative assistance for online education offerings. In addition, child development instructors from fifteen colleges worked together through the e-lect program to offer child development courses online to avoid duplication and make the best use of limited resources. These existing efforts show how colleges and universities can collaborate with one another to provide online education and online services to enhance enrollment, to help student make progress to their degree when course sections are unavailable, and to help support low-enrolled courses/programs by consolidating efforts around the state.

Strategies

In this document, strategies are defined as the overall plan used to identify how we can achieve each goal area. A brief background is provided for each strategy to describe what Minnesota State is currently doing to address this area.

Action Steps

Within each strategy are action steps that describe the specific actions to be taken in order to advance a specific strategy. Action steps include those items that allow Minnesota State to improve upon the ways we currently operate, as well as items that allow Minnesota State to fundamentally change the way we operate.

Access

Our online education strategy must ensure students have broad access and success to higher education across the state

Strategy 1: Ensure all student have online access to high quality support services.

The Online Learning Consortium suggests that students enrolled in online education experiences should have access to “three areas of support including academic (such as tutoring, advising, and library); administrative (such as financial aid, and disability support); and technical (such as hardware reliability and uptime, and help desk).”1 While many campuses provide access to these services at a space on campus, students enrolled in online courses or programs often have unequal access to these services when participating at a distance. It is true that some campuses have developed ways to support students at a distance, but often do so under special circumstances and not as something that is a common practice. It is important for students at a distance who participate in online courses and programs receive comparable support services as their peers who are on campus. As a system, students have access to a handful of statewide services, include tutoring services through Smarthinking and test proctoring sites. Awareness of these services and variability of how campuses offer these services continues to be an issue for students and faculty members.

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 12 – 259 comments referenced student resources and support
• Page 13 – “Important themes varied across the three parts of the Access focus area. However, Student Resources and Support and Technology and Related Support were consistently in the top five across all three parts of the Access questionnaire.”
• Page 16 – “Specifically, most institutions conveyed the desire for more standardized structure and support with faculty training, student readiness assessments, and 24/hour technology support and/or tutoring services. Also, most institutions mentioned academic advising as an area for improvement regarding online programs and courses.”


Strategy 2: Establish and maintain measures to assess and support student readiness for online education.

There are numerous anecdotes of students who enroll in online courses, but neglect to log in to the learning management system or those who log in infrequently. A persistent issue for campuses has been to ensure that students who enroll in online course are aware of the expectations required to participate actively in an online course. In addition to adhering to course expectations, students must have the technical competencies needed to perform the tasks required for online courses. The traditional approach to support student readiness has been to communicate the course expectations to students before enrolling and/or to provide some form of a survey or orientation. Although these efforts do a good job of alerting students of course expectations, they do little to support students whose obligations beyond school (work, family, etc.) or inattentiveness to course work can hinder their academic performance.

Informed by Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 12 - 74 comments referenced student readiness
• Page 16 – “Specifically, student readiness was a major concern for most. Institutions would like to have a way of measuring a student’s readiness for an online program before enrollment and feel often times students are unprepared for the rigor of online learning.”
• Page 16 – “Specifically, most institutions conveyed the desire for more standardized structure and support with faculty training, student readiness assessments, and 24/hour technology support and/or tutoring services. Also, most institutions mentioned academic advising as an area for improvement regarding online programs and courses.”




















Strategy 3: Ensure students have access to online and blended learning experiences in course and program offerings.

Due to financial needs, those responsible for scheduling courses at Minnesota State campuses try to optimize the number of course sections offered by using a variety of delivery modes to meet student needs. These efforts are complicated when decisions needed to be made about cancelling sections, adjusting the max enrollment for each course section, or running courses based on low fill-rate. These are complex exercises for any individual campus to perform on their own, but this can be exponentially complicated when trying to collaborate on offering online sections of a similar course at different campuses.

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 12 - 121 comments referenced standardization and collaboration across institutions, which included topics like a standardized calendar, communication to student, course credit and numbers, enrollment, and incentives.
• Page 16 - “There is a desire for a more standardized and convenient way for students to enroll across institutions. A specific suggestion that was mentioned a couple times was to have one standardized way for students to find other courses at other institutions and register for them. One comment in particular said Minnesota State should provide the structure of the house and allow individual institutions to decorate it”




























Strategy 4: These experiences should support and recognize diverse learning needs by applying a universal design for learning framework.

The OERG report included several references to efforts made by campuses related to the providing support and resources for universal design for learning, the workgroup did not offer any action steps.


Strategy 5: Expand access to professional development resources and services for faculty members

As online course are developed and while faculty members teach online courses, it is critical that faculty members have on-demand access to resources like technical support and course assistance.

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 12 - 47 comments referenced improving functionality and user design of Minnesota State online services
• Page 16 - “Respondents expressed interest in professional development opportunities for faculty (and incentives and funding for these), faculty training, support in content development, and ongoing technical support throughout the teaching processes. Investment in faculty resources and support are believed to be the best way to ensure quality online learning.”






















Strategy 6: Monitor and influence regulatory environments to ensure that students maintain access to online educational opportunities

Complying with and being informed of information related to the state authorization of distance education is needed to ensure Minnesota State institutions can continue to offer educational opportunities to prospective students.













Quality

Our online courses, programs, and services must be of consistent high quality across colleges and universities

Strategy 1: Establish and maintain a statewide approach for professional development for online education

As noted in the OERG report, “faculty members are a large part of ensuring high quality online learning.” In addition to support provided through individual campuses, it is important for Minnesota State to make available professional development opportunities to interested faculty members.

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 11 - 282 comments were related to faculty resources and support, which included areas faculty mentoring, faculty training, peer review/course evaluations, and professional development
• Page 5 – “Strong emphasis placed on faculty (training, support in development of course content, course evaluations, etc.). Specifically, institutions would like more peer review/course evaluations of online courses to help strategize and evolve in the right direction. Many institutions also either spoke of their involvement with Quality Matters (QM) or support for further involvement with QM.”
• Page 16 – “Perhaps unsurprisingly, most institutions deem faculty to be a large part of ensuring high quality online learning. Respondents expressed interest in professional development opportunities for faculty (and incentives and funding for these), faculty training, support in content development, and ongoing technical support throughout the teaching processes. Investment in faculty resources and support are believed to be the best way to ensure quality online learning.”






















Strategy 2: Ensure campuses use an evidenced based and/or nationally benchmarked e.g. Quality Matters or Online Learning Consortium) tool for enhancing quality in online course design

Formed in 2012, the Minnesota Online Quality Initiative (MOQI) serves as a central entity with the goal of promoting quality course design for those course delivered in blended and online delivery modes. MOQI accomplishes this by facilitating training sessions, sharing information on course design practices, and provides opportunities for faculty members to review the design of their course. Central to the work of MOQI is the licensed use of the nationally recognized course design rubric provided by an organization called Quality Matters (QM). The QM rubric is rooted in 21 essential evidenced based standards that promote quality in online course design. Access and use of this rubric requires an institutional subscription to Quality Matters. The cost of this subscription has been reduced for campuses as Minnesota State has subsidized the total cost. With Minnesota State subsidizing the costs associated with Quality Matters, the use of the QM course design rubric, workshops, and course design certifications have been popular among the majority of Minnesota State institutions.

Some campuses have developed their own professional development programming that replace or supplement offerings available through Quality Matters. There is some interest in finding ways to provide additional faculty learning opportunities designed at local campuses.

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 12 - 70 comments referred to Quality Matters.
• Page 5 - “Specifically, institutions would like more peer review/course evaluations of online courses to help strategize and evolve in the right direction. Many institutions also either spoke of their involvement with Quality Matters (QM) or support for further involvement with QM”















Strategy 3: Ensure campuses have identified a process for evaluating and improving instruction for online courses

Just as is the practice in person courses, campuses should ensure peer review and/or evaluations of teaching are being conducted for online courses
.
Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 11 - 50 of the 282 comments regarding faculty resources and support refer to peer review or course evaluations.















Strategy 4: Ensure consistency of student learning outcomes among in person and online education offerings

Often times, the topic of quality is often raised as somehow being unique to online course. The Higher Learning Commission (HLC) accreditation guidelines review the standards and processes institutions have in place to ensure quality in all of educational offerings, including online. Individual institutions are best positioned to define, assess, and ensure quality in online education offerings. There are a number of ways in which institutions have demonstrated quality in individual courses and programs including the evaluation of course design, evaluation of instruction and assessment of student learning outcome.

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 11 - 18 comments describe how online courses currently align with institutional program review.













Strategy 5: Review, conduct, and share research in online education to improve quality.

As scholarly teachers, faculty members value opportunities to review educational literature to inform their own evidenced-based instructional practices. Furthermore, through the process of systematic inquiry, faculty members can make observations and collect data to analyze student learning outcomes.

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 17 – “Overall, faculty appear to enjoy sharing best practices through workshops and conferences. They would like more opportunity and incentives to do so, especially with each other within the Minnesota State University and College System. Specifically, many find regularly scheduled meetings and CATT meetings particularly beneficial. Many mentioned wanting a standardized approach to faculty training and faculty mentoring. Specifically, standardized course evaluations to be able to conduct research on best practices and share these with each other.”



Affordability

Online education must be affordable for our students with its value proposition clearly expressed

Strategy 1: Establish system guidelines operating instructions) for setting, justifying, and evaluating differential tuition.

Online education requires different or additional services that need to be funded. Even though it may not be affordable to all students, tuition at Minnesota State campuses is not high relative to private and for-private options. System and individual colleges and universities need to position themselves effectively within the market. Many campuses are currently relying on the differential between general and online tuition as operating revenue. While more students take online courses, “brick and mortar costs” stay constant. Because students want to know why there is variability in tuition for online courses, transparency is important when setting tuition for online education. There may be benefit to a consistent approach to setting tuition.

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 16 – “Perhaps one of the largest concerns expressed was the high cost of online education for students. In terms of monetary resources, one popular answer was to simply lower the differential for online tuition. Others would be to apply for grants to open up more resource opportunities, lowering costs for online textbooks, contributing resources to student tutoring/advising, and using existing technical resources (D2L, etc.) to accomplish this. Also, some have shifted on-campus resources to online resources in response to the lack of funding towards online education.”




















Strategy 2: Expand the use of quality, open educational resources (OER)

Minnesota State is promoting textbook affordability for students at colleges and universities by supporting and facilitating adoption of open, low-cost, high-quality materials. We strive to do through faculty development on evaluating open textbooks and grants and programing to support campus based OER creation and adoption. OERs will make education more affordable. Certainly, faculty members reserve the right to use whatever materials that meet their needs, but faculty members should be encouraged to investigate the feasibility of using OERs when the quality and availability of materials are satisfied. If students are making decisions not to buy textbooks because they are unaffordable, students will not have access to the resources they need, when they need them.

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 16 – “Perhaps one of the largest concerns expressed was the high cost of online education for students. In terms of monetary resources, one popular answer was to simply lower the differential for online tuition. Others would be to apply for grants to open up more resource opportunities, lowering costs for online textbooks, contributing resources to student tutoring/advising, and using existing technical resources (D2L, etc.) to accomplish this. Also, some have shifted on-campus resources to online resources in response to the lack of funding towards online education.”
















Strategy 3: Streamline funding and access to shared services and technologies

Using the principle of economies of scale, Minnesota State can facilitate the partnering of schools with shared interests who might be able to share costs for procuring specific technologies or services to support online education.

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 16 – “Perhaps one of the largest concerns expressed was the high cost of online education for students. In terms of monetary resources, one popular answer was to simply lower the differential for online tuition. Others would be to apply for grants to open up more resource opportunities, lowering costs for online textbooks, contributing resources to student tutoring/advising, and using existing technical resources (D2L, etc.) to accomplish this. Also, some have shifted on-campus resources to online resources in response to the lack of funding towards online education.”


















Collaboration

In a system as large as Minnesota State, there are long held practices in place that will be barriers to collaborate. In order to make meaningful progress in online education, it is important be open to examining our existing practices and look to find ways to overcome barriers.

Strategy 1: Identify and implement innovative shared service models for student support services.

Each of these actions steps are detailed in other areas.













Strategy 2: Offer faculty development that models and supports collaboration

















Strategy 3: Support faculty collaboration on curriculum

The ability to drawn on our collective strengths and resources when working to develop curriculum, programs, and courses. This is particularly valuable when Minnesota State is asked to address legislative actions (i.e. - Transfer Pathways, Developmental Educations) or Board of Trustee initiatives (i.e. - Twin Cities Baccalaureate).

Informed by: Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations. Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

• Page 5 – “Currently institutions enjoy collaborating and sharing best practices by attending conferences, workshops, webinars, symposiums, etc. (e.g. Distance MN, POET, STAR Symposium). They would like to have more (and different) opportunities, incentives, and funding in the future in order to collaborate across institutions. They would also like to have ways to share online course materials, resources, online course structures, etc.”




















Strategy 4: Identify collaborations that result in strategic advantage, based on effective campus and system academic planning























Appendix A - Online Strategy Survey Results & Recommendations

Prepared by Organizational Effectiveness Research Group. (2016). Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN.

Appendix B - State of the state of Online Education in Minnesota State

A "state of the state of Online Education" in Minnesota State was pulled together in April 2016. This report was used an attempt to provide context to assertions made about online education.

Appendix C - List of Prioritized Action Steps

Items to be reviewed 2017-2018 with implementation to start during the 2018-2019 Academic Year


Advancing Online Education - Executive Summary - November 2017

November 2017

Advancing Online Education in Minnesota State

A strategy for online education
Executive Summary

Executive Summary

The full report titled, Advancing Online Education in Minnesota State, was prepared by the Online Strategy workgroup, an ad hoc workgroup chartered by Minnesota State’s Leadership Council. The ad hoc workgroup convened from January 2017 through August 2017 and was comprised of appointees from each of Minnesota State’s collective bargaining unions. The final report was submitted to the Minnesota State Leadership Council for review and adoption in October 2017.

The complete report includes a total of forty-two (42) action steps aligned with fifteen (15) distinct strategies that support four broad goals to (1) collaborate across institutions in ways that increase (2) access to and the (3) quality of online opportunities that remain (4) affordable for students compared to other higher education providers.

Addressing all forty-two actions included in the full report would be an unmanageable undertaking for Minnesota State and its institutions in the short-term. The authors of this report have identified and prioritized nine (9) action steps campuses should consider over the 2017-2018 academic year, with an intention to begin implementing action steps during the 2018-2019 academic year.

The authors believe now is the time for Minnesota State and its institutions to take decisive action to support online education in ways that ensure we can continue to meet the educational needs of the students we serve.


How were the recommendations in this report developed?

In fall 2016, each Minnesota State campus submitted responses to a set of open ended questions that asked campuses to describe how they were currently addressing issues related online education. Campuses were also asked to provide feedback and/or suggest what Minnesota State could do collectively to support online education efforts. These questions were divided into four broad categories of access, quality, affordability and collaboration.

Responses to this questionnaire were analyzed by the Organizational Effectiveness Research Group (OERG) at Minnesota State University, Mankato.

The ad hoc workgroup was provided with the analysis from the OERG, the raw data responses from each campus, and a qualitative dataset provided as context to common, and often erroneous assertions made about the state of online education at Minnesota State campuses. Data included were demographics of students enrolled in online courses, the performance of these students, the levels and fields of study by students enrolled in online courses, and the number of online course offerings that currently take place throughout Minnesota State.

Additional reports, resources and data from national associations, like EDUCAUSE were also made available to the workgroup for consideration.

As the workgroup considered strategies that could advance online education, they were asked to use the primary and secondary sources listed above to support the fifteen (15) strategies that were developed. The workgroup then developed a set of action steps they believed should be pursued in order to advance each corresponding strategy.

Each action step was further categorized for its potential to positively impact student outcomes, compete against other higher education providers, and/or its potential to make online education more efficient or effective. The intention of categorizing these action steps is to help align each action step with is intended purpose.

How is Online Education defined in this report?

The term “online education” has been used as a blanket phrase for a number of fundamentally different educational models. For the purposes of this report, online education is defined as instruction that is unconstrained by the physical location of the student, campus, course, program, or instructor and often supported by technology.

Strategies and action steps were developed in ways that define students participating in “online education” as having any of the following characteristics:

• Students who enroll in online courses or programs may reside near or far from the campus(es) providing the course(s) or program(s).

• A student’s course load may include offerings where attendance is required in person or where an instructor and students are not required to be in the same physical location.

• Students may enroll in one or more individual online course offerings provided by one or more institutions to that may or may not satisfy degree/program requirements.

• Student may pursue a certificate, program, or degree where a substantial number of courses, perhaps all, are taken without being in the same geographic location as others.

The authors of this report agree that institutions should continue to explore and pursue a variety of models for delivering education, but this report does not address or offer strategies for each of these. Each model of education engenders a specific method used to approach education and is accompanied by its own list of strengths, weaknesses and opportunities.

Considerations for Implementing Action Steps

Minnesota State institutions have their own history of defining and organically growing “online education.” For meaningful progress to occur, the authors of the report have recommended prioritizing action steps that can make substantive improvements to the existing ways we operate, rather than attempting to “wipe the slate clean” and make large transformational changes on behalf of all Minnesota State institutions. Such transformational changes are hard to accomplish in the short-term and frequently run counter to the historical missions of public, non-profit entities like Minnesota State institutions. Such innovations are not discouraged within Minnesota State; instead, the workgroup believes individual institutions are best positioned to pilot such experiments as they can nimbly adapt to the changing needs of students.

Rather than attempting to implement each of the nine action steps individually, the workgroup has identified complementary action steps that can be linked and worked on collectively by goal areas.

Prioritized Action Steps

Items to be reviewed 2017-2018 with implementation to start during the 2018-2019 Academic Year

Access: Our online education strategy must ensure students have broad access to higher education across the state

Strategy 1: Ensure all student have online access to high quality support services.

The Online Learning Consortium suggests that students enrolled in online education experiences should have access to “three areas of support including academic (such as tutoring, advising, and library); administrative (such as financial aid, and disability support); and technical (such as hardware reliability and uptime, and help desk).”1 While many campuses provide access to these services at a space on campus, students enrolled in online courses or programs often have unequal access to these services when participating at a distance. It is true that some campuses have developed ways to support students at a distance, but often do so under special circumstances and not as something that is a common practice. It is important for students at a distance who participate in online courses and programs to receive comparable support services as their peers who are on campus. As a system, students have access to a handful of statewide services, include tutoring services through Smarthinking and test proctoring sites. Awareness of these services and variability of how campuses offer these services continues to be an issue for students and faculty members.

Statewide Student Support Center (Action A) - Minnesota State will provide its institutions and their students with access to a centralized support center during extended hours managed by staff who can assist students synchronously via phone, chat, text/SMS, or web conference. Staff at this support center will supplement, not replace, the human or financial resources campuses currently provide to their students.

Strategy 5: Expand access to professional development resources and services for faculty members

As online course are developed and while faculty members teach online courses, it is critical that faculty members have on-demand access to resources like technical support and course assistance.

Statewide Faculty Support Services (Action A) - Minnesota State provide its institutions and their faculty members with access to a centralized support center during extended hours with staff that can assist faculty members synchronously via phone, chat, text/SMS, or web conference. Staff at this support center would be there to supplement, not replace, the human or financial resources campuses currently provide to their students. The mission of the support center is to be there for faculty members when they need help performing a task or function within the learning environment.

Instructional Design and Technology Services (Action C) - Establish a unit that will provide course design and instructional technology services to selected programs and courses from Minnesota State institutions.

Quality: Our online courses, programs, and services must be of consistent high quality across colleges and universities

Strategy 1: Establish and maintain a statewide approach for professional development for online education

As noted in the OERG report, “faculty members are a large part of ensuring high quality online learning.” In addition to support provided through individual campuses, it is important for Minnesota State to make available professional development opportunities to interested faculty members.

Certification for Online Teaching (Action A) - Minnesota State will design, develop and sustain a world-class statewide certification for faculty members who wish to demonstrate their competency in designing and delivering effective online courses and programs.

Strategy 2: Ensure campuses use an evidence-based and/or nationally benchmarked e.g. Quality Matters or Online Learning Consortium) tool(s) for enhancing quality in online course and program design

Formed in 2012, the Minnesota Online Quality Initiative (MOQI) serves as a central entity with the goal of promoting quality course design for those course delivered in blended and online delivery modes. MOQI accomplishes this by facilitating training sessions, sharing information on course design practices, and provides opportunities for faculty members to review the design of their course. Central to the work of MOQI is the licensed use of the nationally recognized course design rubric provided by an organization called Quality Matters (QM). The QM rubric is rooted in 21 essential evidenced based standards that promote quality in online course design. Access and use of this rubric requires an institutional subscription to Quality Matters. The cost of this subscription has been reduced for campuses as Minnesota State has subsidized the total cost. With Minnesota State subsidizing the costs associated with Quality Matters, the use of the QM course design rubric, workshops, and course design certifications have been popular among the majority of Minnesota State institutions.

Some campuses have developed their own professional development programming that replace or supplement offerings available through Quality Matters. There is some interest in finding ways to provide additional faculty learning opportunities designed at local campuses.

Course and Program Design Standards (Action A) - Provide a set of evidenced-based, peer reviewed tools or models that can be used to guide a quality assurance process for the design and development of courses and programs. Ensure each campus uses a quality assurance process for the design and development of courses and programs.

Affordability: Online education must be affordable for our students with its value proposition clearly expressed

Strategy 1: Establish system guidelines operating instructions) for setting, justifying, and evaluating differential tuition.

Online education requires different or additional services that need to be funded. Even though it may not be affordable to all students, tuition at Minnesota State campuses is not high relative to private and for-private options. System and individual colleges and universities need to position themselves effectively within the market. Many campuses are currently relying on the differential between general and online tuition as operating revenue. While more students take online courses, “brick and mortar costs” stay constant. Because students want to know why there is variability in tuition for online courses, transparency is important when setting tuition for online education. There may be benefit to a consistent approach to setting tuition.

Models for Differential Tuition (Action B) - Develop a model, formula, and/or decision tree to guide a systematic approach for how institutions determine and use online differential tuition funds.

Strategy 2: Expand the use of quality, open educational resources

Minnesota State is promoting textbook affordability for students at colleges and universities by supporting and facilitating adoption of open, low-cost, high-quality materials. We strive to do through faculty development on evaluating open textbooks and grants and programing to support campus based OER creation and adoption. OERs will make education more affordable. Certainly, faculty members reserve the right to use whatever materials that meet their needs, but faculty members should be encouraged to investigate the feasibility of using OERs when the quality and availability of materials are satisfied. If students are making decisions not to buy textbooks because they are unaffordable, students will not have access to the resources they need, when they need them.

Adopting Open Educational Resources (OER) (Action A) - Support and incentivize the creation, modification and adoption of more affordable and/or open educational resources including ancillary materials. Provide incentives when curricula are developed, programs are created, or changes are made to programs.

Collaboration: Our online education strategy must draw on our collective strengths and resources

Strategy 3: Support faculty collaboration on curriculum

The ability to drawn on our collective strengths and resources when working to develop curriculum, programs, and courses. This is particularly valuable when Minnesota State is asked to address legislative actions (i.e. - Transfer Pathways, Developmental Educations) or Board of Trustee initiatives (i.e. - Twin Cities Baccalaureate).

Collaborate on Curriculum (Action A) - Facilitate faculty to faculty collaboration on the development of curricular materials by offering space, tools, financial/human support.
Strategy 4: Identify collaborations that result in strategic advantage, based on effective campus and system academic planning

Revenue Sharing Model (Action D) - Develop a revenue sharing model used in conjunction for online courses and programs