Aplia

Aplia Inc. is an educational technology company founded in 2000 by Stanford University professor Paul Romer that offers online homework products geared toward college-level courses. In March 2007 Cengage Learning (formerly Thomson Learning) acquired Aplia Inc. Aplia was based in Belmont, California until March 2014, when it relocated to Cengage Learning's new Mission Bay, San Francisco office. Cengage has faced an uphill battle in convincing colleges that its online learning platform can overcome the distance it creates between the teacher and student, this is reflected in the stalled growth and bankruptcy Engage started facing in 2008.

History

In 1998, Romer created an online experiment system for use in his economics courses at Stanford University so his students would come to class better prepared and become more engaged with the course material. After other professors expressed interest in his approach, Romer decided to turn this system into the basis for a new company. He raised $10 million in venture capital to start Aplia, an online learning system. Since 2000, it has been used by over 4,300 professors, 1,200,000 students, at 1,300 colleges and universities worldwide. .

Product

Aplia’s basic product includes online homework assignments that professors can assign to students in accounting, business communication, business law, developmental reading, economics, finance, marketing, philosophy, statistics, and taxation. While the basic premise behind each course is the same, course materials vary; in many cases, Aplia problem sets are designed to complement specific textbook from a variety of the leading publishers.

Aplia support representatives set up and edit courses per the professor's schedule.

Assignment types include problem sets, news analyses, tutorials, and (for economics) interactive market experiments.

Aplia is often integrated with textbooks from different publishers. Aplia's questions are written by content experts in their respective fields and the problem sets match the tone, difficulty level, style, of the textbook. Aplia works with publishers, authors, and contributors, and many users believe the quality is decent.

In terms of pricing, many of Aplia's products have a low-cost digital textbook as well as Aplia. In the Friday, May 9 issue of The Washington Post, author Steven Pearlstein writes: "Aplia also paves the way for the textbook industry to ditch a lousy business model in which it has to charge ridiculously high prices for new books because it cannot collect anything from the students who buy them on the used-book market. Instead, publishers could move to a more sustainable model in which the textbook is priced close to the cost of printing and shipping (say, $20), while all students are charged a reasonable fee (say, $60) for what really matters, which is the content of the textbook, the labs and homework exercises."

Research has also shown Aplia to be less effective in the classroom for students who require an indepth relationship with the teacher. Studies are surfacing to find online learning to be another challenge that students must overcome in order to learn a subject they might be unfamiliar with. Some anecdotal evidence has been found that schools administration have found value in the micromanagement software features that Aplia offers, especially with keeping students on track with their assignments and increasing enagagement and participation in the classroom.

To date, Aplia has developed products for the following disciplines: Accounting, Biology, Business Communication, Business Law, Decision Sciences, Developmental English, Economics, Finance, History, Management, Marketing, Philosophy, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology, Statistics, Taxation.

Currently there is little hard evidence that teachers have found significant increases in long term retention, in fact the evidence in Forbes and New York times is trending that students are sharing laptops to cheat and teachers are not able to combat this the way they once did by giving out different tests in the old fashioned method of testing.

Aplia features

Chapter assignments and problem sets

Chapter assignments (or problem sets)--groups of questions based on each chapter of a textbook—are automatically graded and provide students with explanations for every question. All problems are randomized and written by a team of subject matter experts. Most assignments use "Grade It Now" technology. Students are given three attempts on each problem; if they don’t like their score after their first attempt, they may try a second time; if they don’t like their score after two, they may try a third; they don’t have to use all three attempts. Scores are averaged.

News analyses

In economics and finance, Aplia regularly features economics and finance articles from new sources. Each story includes a summary and follow-up questions.

Experiments

For economics, Aplia offers real-time, online market experiments to help students understand what the real market environment is like. Each experiment is supported by assignments that prepare students for this and help them analyze their results. These experiments have had proven success in the classroom as well—according to research, Aplia's methods provide college students with means to truly learn the material.

Multimedia

All of Aplia's courses use multimedia to pique students' interest. Developmental Reading, for instance, uses audio so students can hear how vocabulary words are pronounced; Logic uses interactive Venn diagrams, truth tables, and natural deduction proofs so students keep learning the material hands-on.

Assessment and grading

Aplia keeps instructors informed about student participation, progress, and real-time graphical reports. Instructors can download, save, manipulate, print, import, and export student grades. Gradebook Analytics allow instructors to monitor and address performance on a student-by-student and topic-by-topic basis.

Course management system

Instructors can post announcements, upload course materials, host student discussions, e-mail students, and manage their gradebook with Aplia’s course management system. Aplia works independently or in conjunction with other course management systems.

Aplia criticism

Additional course fees and registration fees

Students are charged (per course) additional registration fees on top of their home institutions tuition or per unit fees. This may amount to more than the parent institution's total cost for the entire course when including materials fees. This has been regarded by some to be a "troubling lack of transparency regarding the total net costs associated with getting a college degree."

Technology and Culture Challenges

The website is designed around a supposed platform to make it easier to learn but upon further depth you start to find its frequently crashing, uses circular logic or reuses the same phrasing across three different questions. Students have complained at length that there is no Aplia app for iOS or Android that this is a particular challenge for students who need to be connected to their class via a mobile device. Instead of joining the 21st century with mobile technology Engage, Mindtap and Aplia have chosen to stick with late 20th century technology and only provide online computer access. This restricts a students accessibility to learn, to study and to complete the coursework and has further hurt the companies ability to compete with so many other offerings. There is also the challenge of Aplia having garnered a growing poor reputation as a turn and burn employer who hires contractors that are given little direction and there is spotty work available because the company has dedicated cashflow away from technology and towards paying existing staff wages due to growing bad media from its Bankruptcy proceedings. Students have complained that there is no access to their current grade via the site, the grade has to be manually calculated by the teacher at the end of the semester or quarter, this is a relic of the past and students find this stressful as they need to know what there grades are and its a simple technology update that Cengage, Aplia and Mindtap have all stopped responding to most work tickets and instead focusing on revenue generating issues.

Social media

The Facebook account for Cengage has received little to no attention from the company with online user groups complaining that the company is negligent in addressing a whole stack of technology challenges they are struggling to solve. Students have reported issues with locked accounts, software incompatibility, frozen screens and being forced to step through multiple screens to accomplish what one will do.

The Yelp account contains a series of particularly scathing reviews, with 21 reviews all giving one out of five stars... yet there has been little to no response from within the company to address or even really to connect with the students facing these issues. https://www.yelp.com/biz/cengage-learning-new-york

Teaching vs telling

Students have raised many concerns that the coursework writing is written in a difficult to understand and hard to follow voice. They are being tested on minute aspects of lectures given online that often are in conflict with what their professor has said in class. Aplia has become a platform that instructors love because it decreases the world they have to do as instructors and moves them to processing data vs teaching students who struggle to understand complex issues. SAppltudents are paying thousands of dollars to be taught a subject only to sit in front of an instructor who refers to the online reading which doesn't teach them... it just gives info without comprehension.

Outsourcing jobs

In 2015 several employees were asked to gather in the main conference room where a tactic of "psychological divide and conquer" separated the employees into the first of many days and weeks of learning that not only was their job being sent overseas that they would be shadowed by their replacement whom they would train.

One employee told Computer World "The employees were warned that speaking to the news media meant loss of severance" Once the story broke the company ignored media contacts and plowed ahead on a double down strategy of cutting costs and pressuring employees vs focusing on a total quality mangement strategy that was recommended by members of the Board and its Founder.

http://www.computerworld.com/article/3002681/it-outsourcing/fury-and-fear-in-ohio-as-it-jobs-go-to-india.html

Online learning research

Academia is rethinking online coursework.

There is a growing body of work that has started to question how helpful online learning courses are versus the old fashioned method of learning from a book. Several articles from the New York Times, Forbes, Pew and Gizmodo have garnered traction among academia who are openly rethinking a change in academic practice to discontinue online learning for their students and focus their academics back to the classroom.

While online learning is growing, there is a lack of standards and accountability among for profit companies like Aplia whose technological issues and backlog of bug fixes is affecting students grades.

Schools are listening to students and traffic on Aplia's Facebook page would indicate that it is not only not listening to the students but that they are actively ignoring and no longer monitoring their Facebook page.

Other e-learning platforms

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.