QUALITY ASSURANCE IN DISTANCE LEARNING
A Study in Higher Education
Gianna Oliveira Bogossian Roque
Central Coordination for Distance learning, Pontificia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro
Rio de Janeiro, 22453900, Brazil
Gilda Helena Bernardino de Campo
Dept. Education and Central Coordination for Distance learning, Pontificia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro
Rio de Janeiro, 22453900, Brazil
Marcus Vinícius de Araújo Fonseca
Programa de Engenharia de Produção, COPPE-UFRJ, Pólo de Xistoquímica, IQ-UFRJ, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Keywords: Quality, Higher education, Distance learning, Formation consistency, Knowledge applicability.
Abstract: The preoccupation with forming graduate students of distance learning courses in Brazil, and those which
aim at forming teachers, have raised concerns, especially with regards to formation consistency. According
to our viewpoint, formation consistency is linked to two factors: reliability, which relates to the ability of the
Higher Education Institution to provide a service in a correct, safe and careful manner; and applicability,
which we understand as the possibility of applying the knowledge acquired during the professional and
social life of the graduate student. This study presents the preliminary results of a research aimed at
verifying the students’ perception of a Licentiate in History about formation consistency in higher education
offered at the distance learning modality.
1 INTRODUCTION
To assess the quality of an educational program, we
must ponder over the definition of the term quality.
On a broader sense, it can be defined as the ability of
an object or action to correspond to its purpose.
The different mechanisms for assessing the
courses adopted by the Education Ministry (MEC) in
Brazil aim at revealing the programs’ quality. For
presential or distance undergraduate courses, the
quality is verified using a few instruments, such as
the National System for Assessing Higher Education
(SINAES) and the National Student Development
Exam (ENADE). Although the instruments exist,
issues related to the quality of Higher Education are
still broadly discussed and incite a few concerns. In
Distance Learning (EAD), it is even more
preoccupying, given the very few results available–
considering that distance graduation in Brazil is still
very recent–and the accelerated growth of this
teaching modality. In addition to the assessment by
SINAES and by ENADE, distance learning courses
in Brazil must comply with the Quality Referentials
for Distance Learning in Higher Education defined
by the Distance Learning Education Secretary of the
Ministry of Education (SEED/MEC).
The purpose of this article is to verify the issues
involving quality assessment of undergraduate
distance learning courses and to present an on-going
research aimed at understanding the students’
perception of the quality of the course in which they
are enrolled.
2 QUALITY IN DISTANCE
EDUCATION
The preoccupation with the quality of graduate
students, whether in presential or distance courses, is
not exclusive to Brazil. Around the world, new
293
Oliveira Bogossian Roque G., Helena Bernardino de Campo G. and Vinícius de Araújo Fonseca M..
QUALITY ASSURANCE IN DISTANCE LEARNING - A Study in Higher Education.
DOI: 10.5220/0003306702930298
In Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Computer Supported Education (CSEDU-2011), pages 293-298
ISBN: 978-989-8425-50-8
Copyright
c
2011 SCITEPRESS (Science and Technology Publications, Lda.)
society demands have required the implementation
of several measures that seek to improve
undergraduate degrees. For example, the Bologna
Protocol, signed on June 19, 1999 by 29 countries of
the European Union (EADTU, 2007). One of its
objectives is to develop a quality assurance process
that somehow ensures a qualification and
performance standard for undergraduate and
graduate degrees in all signatory countries.
Nevertheless, the issues at the core of the debate
about quality in Higher Education, according to
Santana (2007), are discussed under two
perspectives: the critical viewpoint, which reflects
on social inclusion and human development; and the
instrumental viewpoint. The author affirms that “the
instrumental vision makes education a business
comparable to any other commercial enterprise. But
the critical vision is concerned with understanding
quality as having a social function to be fulfilled”
(Santana, 2007, p. 61). In other words, in the
instrumental perspective, quality in education is
geared towards processes and results, while in the
critical vision it refers to the social relevance and the
pertinence of the formation. This distinction affects
the evaluation that the educational programs are
subjected to.
This research focuses on undergraduate
programs offered in the Distance Learning (EAD)
modality. This is justified because the programs in
this modality have been presented as a quality
alternative to a higher education degree for a large
number of individuals seeking both insertion in the
labor market and improvement of their initial
formation.
In the last 6 years, there has been a 1,980%
increase in the number of enrollments in distance
learning undergraduate degrees in Brazil (INEP,
2008), while for presential programs this percentage
was only 25%. This fast growth in EAD leads us to
inquire about the way in which the quality
assessment procedures in these courses have been
implemented and whether these programs promote
innovations noticeable to the students and that result
in a transformation in their professional life.
In order to guide and regulate an EAD program
in Brazil, a document has been developed, titled
“Quality Referentials for Distance Higher Education
Learning” (MEC, 2007). These referentials outline
the guidelines for certification, offer and follow-up
of distance learning courses, and are based on the
following assumptions: there is no single distance
learning model; the best technology and
methodology depend on the nature of the course and
the target audience.
3 FORMATION CONSISTENCY
The Brazilian Government has invested massively in
the distance learning modality. From 2008 to 2010,
there has been a 78% increase in the number of
undergraduate programs offered by public
institutions in this modality. Current higher
education distance learning programs in Brazil
include, primarily, the Pro-Licentiate I and Pro-
Licentiate II programs, which began in 2005, in
addition to the programs linked to the Brazilian
Open University System (UAB), which began in
2006. One of the objectives of the UAB System is to
offer, through the use of information and
communication technologies (ICTs), higher
education to a large number of teachers of the public
school system.
Gatti and Barreto (2009) raise a few issues with
regards to governmental programs oriented to
teachers formation, more specifically, the licentiate
programs offered through EAD. Among the issues
raised, they mention the accelerated and
disorganized growth of program offers in this
modality, considered by the authors as an attempt to
establish a system that reverts the situation of
inequality in access to higher education in Brazil. It
is evidenced by the multiplication of consortiums,
presential facilities, and offer of courses without a
consistent political and pedagogic project for teacher
formation.
In practice, one verifies that the evaluation of
these programs emphasizes the infrastructure, i.e.,
classroom conditions, libraries, laboratories, and
technological resources; faculty; technical
qualification of human resources, for example,
librarians and technicians; management, which
includes coordination of the facilities, the pedagogic
project, the geographic location, and others.
However if the government proposal is to develop a
policy to improve education and to reduce social
inequalities, besides the infrastructure we must
concern ourselves with the issue of formation
consistency of graduates. This, in our view, relates
to two factors: a) Reliability of the higher education
institution (IES) and the program offered, which is
related to the ability of the IES to provide a service
in a correct, safe and careful manner, and b) the
applicability of acquired knowledge, considered as
the possibility of applying it to the student’s social
and professional life.
Each of these factors, in turn, is verified through
different analysis dimensions, as shown in Figure 1.
So, in addition to the infrastructure, which
certainly is fundamental for the good development
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Figure 1: Diagram of Formation Consistency and its relation to the factors of reliability and applicability.
of a course, and is represented by reliability factor,
whose indicators are distributed into different
dimensions, including “tangible elements” and
“pedagogic and political project”, we also consider
as important categories for the assessment of a
course quality for a distance learning undergraduate
program, which are directly related to the
applicability factor,
through its analysis dimensions:
The efficient use of technology, not only
instrumentally, but in a way that the student
may benefit from the technology for his/her
own personal and professional growth;
Knowledge creation, not only in the discipline
but, above all, in a practical context;
Relevance of knowledge, competencies, and
abilities acquired to the reality of the work
environment;
Impact of using the EAD modality in relation to
effective professional learning.
4 RESEARCH SCOPE
The pilot case study developed for this researchused
as a reference a Licentiate Program in History in the
distance learning modality. The program was created
with the support of MEC’s Pro-Licentiate Program–
through the Fundamental Education Secretary (SEB)
and the Distance Learning Secretary (SEED), and is
part of the Pro-Licentiate II Edict. Its objective is to
improve the fundamental education quality through
consistent and context-based initial formation of the
teacher in his/her work area. The target audience
was initially formed by 1,000 (one thousand) laymen
teachers, that is, with no legal qualification to
practice the profession, and who lectured History in
the fundamental and high school public system,
distributed among several Brazilian states. To be a
student in this program, the applicant must be
working as a teacher of the public school system. It
is, therefore, an in-service formation.
Currently, the program counts a total of 790
students, having began its activities in August 2006
and should end them in December 2010.
The program objective is not only to enable
teachers but, above all, to invest in their academic
formation, giving the students a better understanding
of the world from the knowledge acquired in
experiences of different societies, in diverse time
and space conditions. This formation involves the
production and transmission of historical
knowledge, through differentiated practices, such as:
school-teaching, historical research, advisory and
consulting activities. It also involves the use of
several supports: History books and magazines;
annals of congresses; museographic or non-
museographic exhibits; catalogs, videos, films, CD-
Roms, etc.
The program was developed with an emphasis in
the adoption of EAD procedures, and the teaching-
QUALITY ASSURANCE IN DISTANCE LEARNING - A Study in Higher Education
295
learning process was structured in a bi-directional
way, with media predominance.
To assess the students perception about the
formation consistency offered in the distance
learning modality, which is the focus of this article,
we developed a questionnaire, composed of 3 (three)
open questions and 48 (forty-eight) closed questions.
This questionnaire was sent on-line to all active
students. We received 208 answers, representing
26.3% of the total students regularly enrolled at the
time of research.
The procedure for analysis includes quantitative
and qualitative methods. Quantitative analysis was
performed considering the 208 answers to the 48
closed questions. Quantitative data handling has
been done with the statistical software package
Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS).
This step is done to verify the validity and
trustworthiness of the data collection instrument,
that is, the applied questionnaire, by means of the
analysis of data variability and its internal
consistency. This analysis, however, is not part of
this article scope. The qualitative analysis includes
contents analysis, i.e., the interpretative analysis of
respondents’ textual records, from the open
questions in the form. The contents analysis is
achieved with the Analyse Lexicale par Contexte
d’un ensemblement de Segment de Texte
(ALCESTE)
1
software. This software product
analyzes co-occurrences of words in the text, to
organize and summarize the information it deems
more relevant.
In this article, we present the preliminary results
obtained by analyzing the contents of one of the
open questions in the form: In what way has the
acquired knowledge in the program disciplines
enhanced your professional performance?
5 RESULTS
To compose the research corpus, object of this
study, each response by a student-teacher to the open
1
The ALCESTE software was developed in France in
1979, by Max Reinert, of the National Scientific
Investigation Center (CNRS), at Jean Paul Benzécri’s
laboratory, and was made available to the market by
IMAGE society. In the glossary of Pesquisa Qualitativa
com texto, imagem e som: um manual prático, by Martin
Bauer and George Gaskell, ALCESTE is defined as a
“computer program for qualitative research which
distinguishes different types of speech in natural text,
through an automatic statistical analysis” (BAUER, 2007,
p. 491).
question in the questionnaire is considered a Initial
Context Unit (UCI). The set of all UCIs constitutes
the analysis corpus, which will then be processed by
ALCESTE. For the study in question, the corpus is
formed by the set of answers to the first question.
According to Bauer (2007), the procedures for
contents analysis recreate representations in two
primary dimensions: syntactic and semantic. The
former can identify, by means of “the way
something is said or written”, a likely type of
audience. But the semantic dimension verifies “what
is said in a text”, identifying connotative and
denotative meanings in a text by analyzing co-
occurrences of words that, to this author, “is a
statistical analysis of frequent pairs of words in a
corpus of text” (Bauer, 2007, p. 211). The analysis
will also identify “words with function,” such as
articles, verbs, pronouns, etc. and “words with
contents,” which denote relevant information.
ALCESTE classifies in a semi-automatic manner
the words to the inside of a corpus. The words
classification, named by the software product as
“reduced forms,” occurs after the establishment of
matrices. To achieve this, the text is segmented and
the similarities between the segments and
hierarchies of word classes are defined. This method
is called the hierarchical descending classification
method. To the study analyst, these categories are
not the objective per se, but they establish
assumptions or interpretation trajectories.
In the analysis of the resulting corpus of the set of
answers to the question under study, we established
243 UCEs (Elementary Context Units).
Figure 2: Dendrogram of the classes found.
These are defined according to text size (number
of words parsed) and/or sentence score. Of the 243
defined UCEs, 93% were parsed and 4 (four) fully
hierarchical classes were identified (Figure 2), based
on the reduced forms found in each of them (Table
1).
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Naming these classes in function of the reduced
forms found, we have:
Class 1 – Professional growth
Class 2 – History knowledge
Class 3 – Confidence in the contents
Class 4 – Teaching material
Table 1: Reduced forms of each class.
Reduced Forms
CLASS 1 CLASS 2 CLASS 3 CLASS 4
being historic+ contents+ also
is+ fact+ confidence of the
how before student+ colleagues
profession
+ do work subject+
learning new+ to the tutor+
my teach in experience+
liv+fe many have didactic+
stop+ping one critical helped
improve+ this quality elaboration
growth vision more exchange+
were no past+ had
professor+ be+ with doubts
th+ studied+ transmit am
already one mouvoir. book+
performan
ce learn+ of the enough
import+an
t history oth+er didactic+
great+ are because
in the relation in the
improving history mainly
my+ vision material
good+ helped
our+ by
all+ especially
worked+ but
Notice in the dendrogram (Figure 2) that Classes
1 and 3 contrast with Class 4, and these three classes
contrast with Class 2. The grouping of classes 1 and
3 denotes that both have common meanings which
distinguish them from the other classes. This
meaning (professional growth and confidence in the
contents) points exactly to the issue of improvement
of the quality of student formation and his/her
effective professional performance.
Despite having the lowest number of co-
occurrences of words (only 7.08% of u.c.e.), Class 2
is formed by the reduced forms “fact” and “historic”.
“Historic” is the first dimension present in the
answers, and it signals to the focus of the Licentiate
in History program. It is worth reminding that the
question analyzed inquires about the way in which
the knowledge acquired in the disciplines of the
Licentiate in History distance program have
enhanced the student’s professional performance.
5.1 Knowledge Applicability
The question analyzed by ALCESTE is directly
related to the “applicability” factor, more
specifically, the following analysis dimensions: a)
coherence between theoretical and practical
knowledge; b) social relevance of the knowledge; c)
pertinence of the acquired knowledge (Figure 1).
The dimension of coherence between
theoretical and practical knowledge is concerned
with encouraging the student, throughout the
program, to build a body of knowledge in the
disciplines, but especially one that can be applied in
the context of the work practice.
Because this program is about in-service
formation, the dichotomy between theory and
practice is minimized by the daily activities of the
students themselves. They are teachers who teach
History and at the same are pursuing a Licentiate in
History. Thus, theoretical knowledge acquired
throughout the program is used in practice, resulting
in improvements in their performance. This
dimension touches the speech of the interviewees,
especially those classified by ALCESTE in Class 2,
in which the reduced forms identified provide a new
look at the theoretical knowledge of a historical fact,
and that is reflected in new History teaching and
learning practices.
“The differentiated look at History, considering there
is no single explanation for one historic fact
(an
absolute truth) and that by researching, investigating,
collecting data and analyzing sources we can make
History
. This is not to be kept only with me, because I
can encourage my students to always do a critical
reading of historic facts.” (Interviewee no.143)
The dimension of the social relevance of
knowledge is related to the importance to society of
the knowledge produced by the students and the
relevance of the effects it produces on the social and
economic development of the populations for which
it is generated.
For the analyzed program’s target audience,
which is comprised of History teachers from the
public school system, the importance of the effects
of the acquired knowledge is reflected in their
pedagogical practice, and is perceived through the
analysis of the context in which Class 1 reduced
forms are inserted.
“This course was very important in my professional
life, has opened up now horizons that further
improved my professional development, providing me
with more knowledge and a more critical look at
things” (Interviewee no.119)
Therefore, the social relevance of knowledge is
QUALITY ASSURANCE IN DISTANCE LEARNING - A Study in Higher Education
297
based on the formation of technically competent
subjects.
The dimension of pertinence of the acquired
knowledge verifies if the social values of the
knowledge that are produced, selected, and
transmitted do correspond to the expectations of the
society which it proposed to create. In other words,
it verifies the adequacy of the knowledge built
throughout the course.
Considering that our target audience is composed
of practicing teachers, the reduced forms included in
Class 3 analyzed by Alceste point to the confidence
students acquire with regards to History contents.
This becomes more evident when analyzing these
forms in context, i.e., in the answers given in the
questionnaire. For instance:
“It helped me to have more confidence when
transmitting the contents
to be worked on and to
present it with assurance, and I find myself more
prepared to research and develop them in class”
(Interviewee no. 200).
The dimension of pertinence of the acquired
knowledge, in our understanding, is closely related
to the way in which student-teachers have managed
to improve their lessons, since this dimension
signals the adequacy of the acquired knowledge
throughout the Licentiate in History program.
The reduced forms in Class 4 refer to the course
itself, i.e., to the didactic materials employed, the
adopted methodology, the tasks that were
performed, among other aspects. This class,
therefore, does not add value to the analysis of the
question at hand.
6 FINAL CONSIDERATIONS
In recent discourses about Education in Brazil, a
strong connection is noticed between the quality of
Fundamental Education and Higher Education,
through the offer of distance learning courses geared
towards teachers continuous education. The offer of
these courses has grown very rapidly in the last few
years. Nonetheless, the assessment of their quality
has focused on the infrastructure offered by Higher
Education Institutions, especially the presential
support infrastructure that is available to the
students.
We believe, however, that it is essential to assess
the course program in terms of how adequate the
knowledge acquired by students and if they are
effectively applied in the student professional life.
This issue is evident in our research results, in which
the students express how important it is to apply the
knowledge acquired throughout the course.
When the students are asked how it has affected
their professional performance, they have pointed to
four speech categories: their professional growth;
the theoretical knowledge of a historical fact; the
confidence in relation to the contents they learned;
the quality of the course’s didactic material.
In 3 (three) of these classes found, it is clear how
important the acquired knowledge pertinence and
relevance are to the reality of the work environment,
from the moment in which this knowledge is put to
practice. The students' speech signals to a sense of
personal fulfillment. Therefore, we consider it
important to verify the manner in which the
assessment of the quality of distance learning
courses has been implemented, so that we can
propose new indices that point to formation
consistency.
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