Joint Response Regarding COVID-19 and Advice on Transitioning Face-to-Face Courses Online
A collection of resources and initiatives to support your efforts in moving courses to an online format when emergency situations arise.
A collection of resources and initiatives to support your efforts in moving courses to an online format when emergency situations arise.
OLC, QM, UPCEA, and WCET
Updated March 12, 2020
During the week of March 2nd, the Online Learning Consortium (OLC), Quality Matters (QM), University Professional and Continuing Education Association (UPCEA), and WCET (the WICHE Cooperative for Educational Technologies) released a joint statement on the spread of COVID-19 and academic continuity planning. Since then, a number of institutions of higher education have either transitioned face-to-face instruction online or are making plans to do so.
As leaders in the field of online learning, the four organizations would like to express appreciation and admiration for the leadership that online educators and administrators are taking in helping minimize academic disruption across the nation. Facilitating the development and offering of high-quality online courses and programs can be challenging under the best of circumstances. Facilitating the transition of classes designed for face-to-face pedagogical practices, including the potential development of new types of assessments, into an online format during an academic term is challenging work.
Over the next several weeks, we anticipate there will be increased conversations about the effectiveness of online education, the role online education can and should play in continuity planning, how to effectively transition face-to-face courses online during a crisis, and how to best support both faculty and learners who might unexpectedly need to navigate online learning spaces. These are all critical conversations that the four organizations are working to address, both independently with their members as well as collaboratively for higher education. We will shortly be releasing plans for joint research, writing, and sharing of information about online education during the upcoming year.
In the meantime, we would like to offer the following thoughts and advice:
We support institutional leaders that are considering the delivery of instruction via online technologies and are cautiously optimistic that once COVID-19 concerns abate that those same leaders will more deeply engage with online learning pedagogy, strategy, and quality assurance practices reflective of the needs of those engaged in teaching and learning online.
OLC, QM, UPCEA, and WCET all understand that it may be difficult to assess and act on information, especially in rapidly changing conditions such as the spread of COVID-19 (coronavirus). We encourage individuals to monitor information and updates provided by the CDC, and to abide by their guidelines. The CDC has created a special COVID-19 page and just issued “interim guidance” for higher education administrators that is a must read.
Further, our organizations are hosting or supporting dissemination of information via:
Questions?
Undoubtedly in situations as fluid as the COVID-19 outbreak you may have questions that have not been addressed in the resources above. Please contact us with any questions that you may have about academic continuity planning and online operations – we’re here to help.
Email: Online Learning Consortium (OLC) Twitter: @OLCToday
Email: Quality Matters Twitter: @QMProgram
Email: University Professional Continuing Education Association (UPCEA) Twitter: @UPCEA
Email: WCET (WICHE Cooperative for Educational Technologies) Twitter: @wcet_info
For more resources compiled by OLC, please visit: OLC Continuity Planning and Emergency Preparedness – A collection of resources and initiatives to support your efforts in moving courses to an online format when emergency situations arise.