What role can online courses play for early learning
professionals?
Yo Ann MartinezKQED Education Network
Slides provided by Michelle PhilipsResearcher
Project Background
• Online course with F2F orientation, mid-course meeting, and graduation
• 6 weeks
• 80 applied, 40 were selected, 28 finished
• Participants were homecare preschool providers
• Discussions were bilingual (ENG/SP)
• Instructor was certified fluent Spanish
Evaluation Activities
• Pre-survey of all applicants (n=56)
• 2 mid-course focus groups (n=19)
• Post-survey of participants who completed the program (n=19)
• 1 final group discussion (n=19)
• Phone interviews with those who did not attend graduation
Participants
• All ran preschool programs in their homes• All female, except for one male• The majority had not taken an online class
before• All had internet access in the home• The majority responded that they used
their computers primarily for educational purposes, entertainment, shopping, and paying bills
Role for Online Courses Context
Homecare preschool providers…• Do not have benefit from a preparation program
similar to what teachers typically have• Do not have access to as many professional
growth opportunities as preschool providers in centers or teachers have
• Are bound by the schedules of the families they serve - their schedules are unpredictable
• Must be at home all day every day and available to their clients (isolated)
Role for Online Courses Findings
Homecare preschool providers…• Are able to participate at their convenience• Do not have to drive to and park on a campus
(at night) to benefit from courses with other colleagues
• Are able to participate with and learn from other professionals who work in very similar contexts
• Are able to participate with and learn from other professionals who share their concerns
• Are able to share the resources they find with their clients
Sustained Resources
“ As day care providers, they don’t give us a handout, or a handbook telling us what we should be looking for at each stage in the child’s life regarding their age, but when we got to the milestones in the class, it gives you a website that you can go to and say, ‘okay this is what I should be doing here’. You have something to look into, or look forward to working with, and getting more information.”
Accessibility
“If the course wasn’t bilingual, I wouldn’t
have taken it because I wouldn’t have had
the opportunity to express myself fully. Here
is an opportunity to express myself and feel
more comfortable. It also helped my English
because I am weak in English, the kind of
English that is involved in the course.”
Summary: Role of online courses
• Increased accessibility for a profession restricted in time and place
• Professional growth opportunities for an often-overlooked population of providers
• Multiple ways to participate and express oneself in the course
• A professional community with which to share ideas and practices
• Reduced isolation• Sustained, always-available resources for
providers and families
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