Strategic initiatives in the online environment: opportunities and challenges
Abstract
Purpose
The paper aims to present a strategic model for online program success in higher education and to discuss the implications of web‐based teaching for learning assessment and program evaluation.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper uses an analytic approach to deconstruct a successful online program to identify necessary elements for the initiative to become apart of the institutional culture.
Findings
The paper traces the evolution of online learning in higher education over the past decade, poses the necessary strategic planning questions that must be answered, identifies critical success factors, argues that that the broadening scope of evaluation will have to encompass emerging constructs such as information fluency, and hypothesizes online learning as a systemic initiative.
Research limitations/implications
The study intends to stimulate case study research at other colleges and universities using the template of this paper to assess whether or not the model constructs and elements are robust with respect to institutional context.
Practical implications
This paper outlines a planning and assessment protocol that may be used for establishing successful online programs and assessing the outcomes of the initiative in terms of the original objectives as well as unanticipated side effects.
Originality/value
This paper unifies many heretofore disparate components of online learning as they effect student populations, faculty development, necessary support services, program accountability, infrastructure issues, and new models for evaluation.
Keywords
Citation
Hartman, J., Dziuban, C. and Moskal, P. (2007), "Strategic initiatives in the online environment: opportunities and challenges", On the Horizon, Vol. 15 No. 3, pp. 157-168. https://doi.org/10.1108/10748120710825040
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited