Michelle:
First, thank you for sharing!
I especially like your introductory statement, "Well-designed online courses and programs are critical to student success. In the California Community Colleges, resources are not always available to support the development of quality courses and to facilitate the establishment of a distance education program that effectively meets student needs, conforms to existing laws and regulations, and complies with accreditation standards." Your first phrase is key to our college's philosophy requiring faculty to be trained in the LMS, best practices in course design, and online pedagogy.
Putting teeth to this policy has remained a challenge, most specially in buying Dean support. We are beginning to move towards a more data-driven decision-making model that includes some new tools being made available to our department as part of a retention/persistence/completion initiative. Our goal is to use data to demonstrate what we know anecdotally (and from current/past data obtained through horrendous manual systems). that well built and well taught online courses can and do improve retention, persistence and successful completion.
While I have just begun to review your rubric, it is very well thought out. I appreciate that it is CC licensed and that it is intended to be used system-wide, providing a ready guidance tool for all system colleges. I also appreciate that it addresses accessibility and accommodation.
I am suspecting that the rubric's development was a long process, and also suspect that there is still a long road to travel to assure that all online courses in your system meet these standards.
Thank you,
Agent K
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