online teaching

history

I have included this essay because I am frequently asked for details about my rather unusual career and how I got to be doing what I'm doing. I started with online education in 1999, when I helped develop a set of blended delivery courses (online and face to face) for the MA in Cornish Studies for the University of Exeter. I continued working with these until I returned to the States in 2001, when I had the good fortune to arrive three short weeks before 9/11. There was a moratorium on most academic hiring in Florida at that point, but I did find that there was a need for people to teach courses online. I had done it before, so I signed up to teach two online Humanities courses for St. Petersburg College. I figured that it would tide me over while I looked for more "permanent" work, read "tenure track", through the rough times. I just loved it, though. I enjoyed the challenges of building courses online and teaching students who would otherwise not have the opportunity to pursue higher education. My students were special, and the teaching was some of the most satisfying I had ever done. Online teaching calls for a completely different pedagogy, and it was one that I found very challenging. I realized I was the happiest and most satisfied I had ever been. I asked "could I make a living this way?" I ran some numbers and the nature of my job search changed. Today I am an adjunct for three different schools, St. Petersburg College, Florida Community College and AXIA College. I primarily teach Humanities core courses, and the amount I teach varies per term. There are some great things about earning a living this way, but it's not for everyone. Here I will address some of the very real benefits and drawbacks to becoming a cyber prof.

pros

This job can be very comfy. I don't have to get dressed up to go to work, in fact, I don't have to get dressed at all. I can teach from anywhere that has a decent internet connection anywhere in the world, and I can do it on my own time. I can live where I want and travel when I want. If I have an illness or family emergency, I can attend to it without worry, and as I have elderly parents, this is a good thing. If I want to leave for a couple of weeks in the middle of a term, I can just do it as long as I set aside time to get my work done. I don't have to sit on committees, or go to meetings. I have no commute, and no stacks of papers to deal with. It's very environmentally friendly! Since my only office is a home office, I get great tax deductions. There is no pressure to publish so I do it for myself. I am making a pretty good living for someone with my type of degree, and I have the freedom and flexibility that I love. It works for me at this stage in my life where I need these things. However there are things to consider...

cons

To make a decent living teaching online you have to teach A LOT. I generally teach about 8 classes per term to earn the kind of money I want to be earning. The reason I can do that is because all the course prep is done ahead of time, so I can handle more courses. I certainly couldn't do that face to face! However, all the grading can be totally insane. I have lots (but I also assign essays so I do have myself to blame). Online teaching takes a lot of time. It's like comparing apples to oranges, though, so you need to learn a bit about how it works before you decide if it's for you. Even with all the nifty bells and whistles, online courses don't run themselves. Not at all. To be a good online prof, you need to be a good teacher, engaged and personable.

You don't get the hassles of working for an institution, but you don't get the benefits either. As of this writing it's still hard to be a fully online prof and be tenure track with one institution. I know some who are, but they still have many face to face duties with an institution. Their lifestyle is still quite different from mine. I don't get insurance or other benefits, I pay my own way to conferences, and I don't have much by way of collegial stimulation. I do belong to mailing lists with all my institutions and within various disciplines, bit it isn't the same as meeting a colleague over lunch and discussing your latest research. Conferences become even more important in maintaining an academic presence and in just getting the stimulation and encouragement that many academics need.

Also, if you're one of those academics who just love the prestige and exclusivity of the ivory tower, this may not be for you either. While some academics are terribly jealous of what I do, others look down their noses at online teaching in general. In doing a salary comparison of where I am now and tenure track assistant profs in my field I'm competitive, but there's no way that I can make the next big jump to an associate professor grade without there being 36 hours in the day or developing superhuman powers. Right now that's fine with me, but it may be different a few years down the road. I realize that this is a very new way of doing things for universities. I'm hoping that somewhere down the road, institutions won't care if their profs are on site, and those of us who choose to develop online education as their specialization will be full players. I'd love to be able to develop graduate level courses or seminars, but that isn't possible for me just now. It isn't where my bread and butter is, and that's just fine. I'm helping to impart important concepts to people who need them, and I get greater joy from that at this stage than lots of theoretical noodling. I can do that elsewhere.

Also, realize that it is hard to keep up an active research profile and make good money this way. It's hard to find the time to keep writing (although I still do). You don't get the sabbaticals or holidays that most active researchers have the luxury of. Then again, no one is going to ask me to write any grants to earn my keep.

how do I get started?

So you think you still want to do this? Ok, let's go. Remember that it may take awhile for you to build up enough institutions to make a good wage. Schools typically have course caps on adjuncts, so you may need to get a few schools together. The first thing to do is look at what you can teach and do a search for schools that have strong online programs. I'd suggest community colleges first because many other universities tend to draw on their own talent pool in developing their online courses. If you're not in the US look at the Open University or in Distance Learning programs. Very simply, e-mail their distance education coordinator and tell them that you're interested in getting started. You will most likely need to do some training in online pedagogy and on how to operate and develop content for online learning management systems. I have been trained in Web CT, ANGEL, and Blackboard. If you already teach face to face, this will be very valuable for you. As I said, it's like apples and oranges, and you need to learn to do this properly.

Be sure to make sure the schools you are looking at are accredited and have a good reputation. There are some online programs that don't, and you don't want to be affiliated with them. If you are business or technologically oriented, you may wish to investigate accredited and respected corporate training programs and institutions. They are often in need and it could be a good way to go. Right now business, health and technology online programs are more developed than those in the Humanities and Social Sciences. It's only a matter of time, though, before more curricula go online. If you have more questions or want specific recommendations, please feel free to contact me and I will try to be helpful.