Retention & Restoration: Options for Digital Learning
Sunflowers From Last Year's Seeds

Retention & Restoration: Options for Digital Learning

Hello, #ANewPerspective readers! I have a funny story that leads to the reflection in this edition. Last year, we planted sunflower seeds in our garden. The vibrant blooms attracted pollinators, and the birds feasted on the seeds. I don’t mind their visits—they add beauty and color to the landscape. We made several attempts to attract them, even adding a birdbath for their use. However, unchecked bird activity can be disruptive to a garden, akin to insidious issues infiltrating thriving educational systems. We shooed away the birds but left the seeds scattered on the ground. Now, this season, we’re reaping the benefits as beautiful plants sprout from those dropped seeds. The garden is in bloom, the pollinators are back; a vivid illustration of retention and restoration.

Education and gardening share interesting parallels, particularly when it comes to retention and restoration. As the Spring 2024 Semester began, I’ve seen webinar topics focusing on enrollment strategies, addressing drop-outs and stop-outs, and managing D, F, and W rates. The letter—grades of “D,” “F,” or withdrawal seem to serve as a trending metric, closely tied to retention. These concerns weigh heavily on private colleges, state institutions, and public universities alike causing changes to budgets and measures to address the issues. In my garden, I’m already planning to net a few plants, ensuring a controlled harvest and replanting opportunities for the sunflowers.

While gardeners may employ netting to protect sunflowers or bag pineapples against pests, educators face a different challenge: improving D, F, and W rates while devising innovative student engagement strategies. The roles of gardeners, academic advisors, and leaders converge, especially in the context of retention and restoration. Just as gardeners nurture annuals and perennials that reemerge to beautify the landscape, administrators, and faculty must prepare for the impending enrollment cliff in higher education. Everyone has a place in the process. Regardless of your role, you may need to consider these overarching questions:

  • How can educational institutions effectively attract and engage students?
  • What interventions can prevent students from prematurely abandoning their educational journey?
  • How can institutions create cultures that manage the tension between prioritizing people and organizational operations?

The Cycle of the Garden

The Promise of Digital Learning: Fallacy or Fact?

Over the past few years, discussions about the enrollment cliff have intensified. As an instructional designer, I find this phenomenon intriguing because students serve as the shared foundation that keeps faculty and staff actively engaged.

The enrollment cliff refers to an anticipated decline in college enrollments due to demographic shifts.         

While this metaphorical cliff poses challenges, it also presents opportunities for higher education institutions. Amid these challenges, digital learning emerges as a beacon of hope. Lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic, during which institutions swiftly transitioned to online learning, underscore the effectiveness of digital approaches. Digital learning (whether online, blended, or hybrid) offers a way to reach more students, provide flexible learning options, and reduce costs.

Digital learning, like biodiversity, supports a harmonious approach and introduces sustainability options for education. It can be delivered synchronously, with live classes, or asynchronously, with pre-recorded lectures and materials or in a blend of in-person and online sessions. This flexibility allows students to learn at their own pace and on their schedule. Digital platforms, such as learning management systems (LMS), apps, and video conferencing tools, are the backbone of digital learning. They provide virtual spaces where students can interact with instructors, access course materials, and engage in discussions with their peers.

Similar to making sustainable changes in the garden, digital learning offers greater access, flexibility, and personalization for learners. It can help institutions navigate the enrollment cliff by reaching a broader audience, including non-traditional students and those in remote areas. Digital learning, especially online options, can also reduce costs for institutions and students. It eliminates the need for physical infrastructure and reduces commuting, leading to a lower environmental impact.

Gardens serve multiple purposes. They are memorial spaces, meeting spots, and areas for reflection where the gardener works at sustainable practices. To navigate the enrollment cliff, institutions must make education just as multifaceted and sustainable—meeting students' environmental, economic, and social needs. One answer is to create options for interdisciplinary connections. There is no limit to the opportunities it offers.

I leave you with one final question: What would it look like if all institutions of higher learning embrace digital learning as a means of reimagining education for the digital age?

Surviving the enrollment cliff is essential, but thriving requires more. It demands visionary leadership, creative approaches, and a commitment to innovation.         

Students can collaborate with community and university partners and create real-world connections. Digital learning isn’t merely a lifeline—it’s a catalyst for growth. Like a well-tended garden, education can bloom with resilience, adaptability, and a vibrant tapestry of ideas.

Stay tuned for more enlightening discussions in our future newsletters. Until then, keep nurturing #ANewPerspective!

Dr. Hazel Carter

Lead Consultant at Human Resource Portal

7 个月

Florence I recently started a MSc Psychology with Wolverhampton University via distance learning in the UK and before the end of the first semester I dropped out, my friend who enrolled at the same time with me dropped out as well. We dropped out because of lack of access to faculty, lack of promised academic advising, and lack of interest in student success. Teacher presence was missing in action and technological presence was choking us. The comparison you made between utilizing netting to preserve sunflowers and the educational practices required to enhance retention rates and engage students more efficiently is both creative and appropriate. Similar to how a gardener attentively cares for their plants to guarantee a bountiful harvest, educational institutions must cultivate their students to promote achievement and reduce issues such as dropout rates. Exploring the treatments and techniques that might be implemented to deter students from prematurely abandoning their educational pursuits is thought-provoking. Establishing a friendly and stimulating teaching atmosphere is essential, as is striking a balance between attending to administrative tasks and giving priority to the requirements of the student population.

Dr. Andre Sherriah

Engineer II (Integration)

7 个月

Two fundamentally important questions. Before providing my thoughts I would like to add a question of my own related to modern technologies in modern learning. I am definitely for the integration of all modern technological possibilities in the learning landscapes, however, with technologies such as chat gpt and other such technologies which can do the work for the student; how facilitators of learning help guide students towards really wanting to learn, not for a grade but for personal development, so that in the end they do not use the technology to do the work for them in hope of a passing A grade, but to use the technology to really augment their learning experience? Sorry that the question is so long wi fed but I hope it is understood

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