Of the 45 students who started Roya Furmuly's online remedial algebra class, just over half stayed until the end.
The instructor at Pierce College in Woodland Hills dropped about eight for attendance problems and about eight withdrew on their own. Of the 28 who remained, only 15 passed.
"We have a lot to figure out to make them more successful," Furmuly said of the students.
Offering remedial classes online has become a key strategy for colleges and universities hoping to save money and move students out of basic skills classes into courses they get credit for. The ultimate goal is to get more students to graduate faster so they can make room for other students.
"In the traditional classroom, you're paying for a teacher in front of a classroom, you're paying for that building time," said Stanford University education professor Eric Bettinger. "If we can cut costs for these types of programs, we might be in the position of offering something that has the same efficacy that would save money.
"There's no evidence that it will perform better, but our hope is that it's a cheaper delivery mechanism," he said.
Some educators cite other benefits: Students in online classes have the flexibility to study on their own schedule and can skip the material they already know. Lectures and more difficult course work can be viewed repeatedly, and feedback on homework is instant.
But as Furmuly's experience with Math 125 showed, there are significant pitfalls in the approach.
Some educators say online remedial classes are a bad fit for students who test far below college level and lack the self-motivation, study habits — or even the technical savvy — to complete the class.
They argue that those students who need the most personal attention end up getting the least in online classes.
"If you come to me and you're reading at a sixth-grade level and hoping you get the feedback and instruction you need [online], you're assuming a lot," said Patti Levine-Brown, president of the National Assn. for Developmental Education, who has helped develop online courses around the country.
By all accounts, traditional remedial courses are failing the students they are intended to help.
In California's community college system, 85% of entering freshmen need remedial English, 73% remedial math. Only about a third of these students end up transferring to a four-year school or graduating with a community college associate's degree.
It's a costly failure. The Cal State and community college systems are estimated to spend more than $530 million each year on remedial English, reading and math courses on their campuses.
Because of the increasing crowding at California's public universities and colleges, Gov. Jerry Brown has been urging administrators to embrace online education.
Not only are those classes significantly cheaper, but they also can enroll many more students at the same time.
The classes are beginning to spring up around the state.
In January, San Jose State joined with the Silicon Valley education start-up Udacity to offer low-cost, entry-level classes, including remedial math. The goal is to use new teaching methods to help students pass these classes the first time.
Pierce College is planning a pilot project this fall offering three fully online remedial math classes.
"The question is to what extent they can work and in what kinds of conditions," said Daniel Greenstein, director of postsecondary success strategies at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which has awarded $3 million in grants to develop entry-level and remedial courses and evaluate the viability of using so-called massive open online courses.
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