The Professional Development Centre, University of New South Wales has offe
red a successful postgraduate programme in Higher Education for university
academics in Australia since 1991. After developing independent study packa
ges in print, video and audio in most subjects to enable wider access to th
e course through flexible delivery, the Centre has recently looked to the I
nternet as a medium to support learning in our programme. in doing so, we s
ought to use the interactive potential of the medium, while maintaining the
pedagogical principles of student-centred learning and reflective practice
established elsewhere in our programme.
This paper presents an evaluation of one subject (Information Technology fo
r Teaching and Learning) which is taught entirely online, and uses public d
omain browsers, e-mail and file transfer, integrated with software that we
have developed (WebTeach(C)), to facilitate a range of teacher-learner and
learner-learner interactions necessary for a deep approach to learning. Our
students are practising university academics who wish to obtain formal qua
lifications in teaching and learning and who, because of their professional
commitments, are mostly unable to attend on-campus lectures and seminars.
This report draws on data collected through archived transcripts of the onl
ine interactions that occurred during the conduct of the subject, students'
reflective journals, an independent learning report conducted by a student
in another subject, and the teachers' own reflections on the entire proces
s.