4 Steps to Accelerate Your Online Course

Course acceleration is the process of transitioning a traditional, semester-long course into a shorter format, typically seven to eight weeks, without sacrificing academic rigor or integrity (Pastore, 2010). The goal is to rethink your course structure, focus on learning outcomes, and boost student engagement, not on cutting corners or condensing content.

In other words, acceleration is about thoughtful restructuring, not cramming! In accelerated courses, students will still complete the same credit-hour workload (for example, 135 total hours for a three-credit course) but over fewer weeks (Wlodkowski, 2003). This means students will spend more hours per week on coursework, so it’s vital to thoughtfully design a balanced weekly learning experience. A thoughtfully designed change in course length and structure does not negatively impact student achievement of learning outcomes, instructor ratings, or student retention (Anderson & Anderson, 2012; Austin & Gustafson 2006; Carman & Bartsch, 2017; Eames, et al., 2018; Kucsera & Simaro, 2010; Vlachopoulos, et al., 2019; Shaw, et al., 2013; Sheldon & Durdella, 2009; Wlodkowski & Westover, 1999).

Why Do Accelerated Online Courses Work So Well for Adult Learners?

Modern adult learners are busy professionals balancing their careers, families, and educational goals. Accelerated online courses appeal to them because they:

  • Allow learners to achieve their goals faster without sacrificing quality
  • Fit into busy schedules with predictable, time-bound structures
  • Provide them with momentum and quick wins
  • Often emphasize application and real-world connection, which adults value
  • Offer focused, immersive learning experiences that fit how adults prefer to learn

 

Acceleration works for these learners when the course is well paced and engaging, changes you can begin considering even before meeting with an instructional designer.

Preparing to Accelerate Your Course

Before you meet with your instructional designer, here are four practical steps to begin preparing your course for acceleration. Each includes optional AI prompts to help you work more efficiently.

The Role of Your Instructional Designer

Your instructional designer is your partner in refinement, helping you transform early ideas into a cohesive, high-quality, and student-centered course. Bringing your initial objective and topic restructuring, opportunities for supplementary materials and activities, and notes on content optimization will make your redesign process more productive and collaborative.

If you’re not quite ready to meet with your instructional designer, that’s okay! There’s still plenty you can do to make progress. You can continue refining your course by working through additional preparation activities on your own. Visit 10 Steps to Accelerate Your Course for practical guidance, examples, and tools to help you strengthen your course structure and get closer to being ready for acceleration support.

Putting It All Together

Accelerating a course isn’t about doing more in less time, it’s about doing the right things in the right order. By preparing with clear objectives, aligned topics, thoughtful workload balance, and creative content redesigns, you’ll set your accelerated course, and your students, up for success.

References

  • Anderson, T. I. & Anderson, R. J. (2012). Time compressed delivery for quantitative college courses: The key to student success. Academy of Educational Leadership Journal, 16(S1), S55.
  • Austin, A. M. & Gustafson, L. (2006). Impact of Course Length on Student Learning. Journal of Economics and Finance Education, 5(1), 26–37. http://www.economics-finance.org/jefe/econ/Gustafsonpaper.pdf
  • Boyd, D. (2007). Effective teaching in accelerated learning programs. Adult Learning, 15(1-2), 40-43. doi:10.1177/104515950401500111
  • Carman, C. A. & Bartsch, R. A. (2017). Relationship Between Course Length and Graduate Student Outcome Measures. Teaching of Psychology, 44(4), 349–352. https://doi.org/10.1177/0098628317727912
  • Eames, M., Luttman, S., Parker, S. (2018). Accelerated vs. traditional accounting education and CPA exam performance. Journal of Accounting Education 44(1). DOI: 10.1016/j.jaccedu.2018.04.004
  • Kops, W. G. (2014). Teaching Compressed-Format Courses: Teacher-Based Best Practices. Canadian Journal of University Continuing Education, 40(1), 1-18, http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/cjuce-rcepu.
  • Kucsera, J.V., Zimaro, D. (2010). Comparing the Effectiveness of Intensive and Traditional Courses, College Teaching, 58:2, 62-68, DOI: 10.1080/87567550903583769
  • Marques, J. (2012). The Dynamics of Accelerated Learning. Business Education & Accreditation, 4 (1). 101-112. https://ssrn.com/abstract=2005248.
  • Pastore, R. S. (2010). The effects of diagrams and time-compressed instruction on learning and learners’ perceptions of cognitive load. Educational Technology Research and Development, 58(5), 485-505. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11423-009-9145-6
  • Scott, P. (2003). Attributes of high-quality accelerated courses. In R. J. Wlodkowski & C. E. Kasworm (Eds.), Accelerated learning for adults: The promise and practice of intensive educational formats [special issue]. New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 97, 29-38. doi: 10.1002/ace.86
  • Shaw, M., Chametzky, B., Burns, S. W., & Walters, K. J. (2013). An Evaluation of Student Outcomes by Course Duration in Online Higher Education. Online Journal of Distance Learning Administration, 16(4), 1–33.
  • Sheldon, C. Q. & Durdella, N.R. (2009). Success rates for students taking compressed and regular length developmental courses in the community college. Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 34:1-2, 39-54, DOI: 10.1080/10668920903385806
  • Thornton, B., Demps, J., & Jadav, A. (2017). Reduced Contact Hour Accelerated Courses and Student Learning. Journal of Instructional Pedagogies, 18. https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1151741.pdf
  • Vlachopoulos, P., Jan, S. K., Lockyer, L. (2019). A comparative study on the traditional and intensive delivery of an online course: design and facilitation recommendations. Research in Learning Technology 27. DOI: 10.25304/rlt.v27.2196
  • Wlodkowski, R.J. & Westover, T.N. (1999). Accelerated Courses as a Learning Format for Adults. Canadian journal for the study of adult education, 13, 1-20.
  • Wlodkowski, R. J. (2003). Accelerated learning in colleges and universities. New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2003(97), 5-16. https://doi.org/10.1002/ace.84