This workshop brings together past recipients of Sloan-C’s Excellence in Online Teaching and Effective Practice awards to offer tips on online teaching and present specific techniques and strategies for organizing and facilitating online courses that have worked for them.
2. Introductions Susan Cannata, University of North Carolina Pembroke, Associate Professor, English (2009 University of North Carolina Board of Governors Award for Teaching Excellence) Damon Gatenby, UMass Dartmouth, Instructional Technologist Phil Ice, Director of Course Design, Research & Development, American Public University System Jen Riley, UMass Dartmouth, Academic Director of Online Education; Associate Professor, English and Women’s Studies (Sloan 2008 Excellence in Online Teaching award recipient) Tracey Russo, UMass Dartmouth, Instructional Technology Manager
10. Effective Online Course Site Design: Strategies and Tips Tracey RussoInstructional Technology Manager
11. Course Redesign What are your objectives for the online course or online component? What activities work well in your f2f classroom? What activities do you think could be redesigned for the online environment? How will the learner demonstrate what they have learned? What content should be taught, in what order?
12. Putting It All Together Gather course materials, resources Course organization Clear and straightforward Consistent design Decide how to organize content activities topics weeks Keep it simple
13. Storyboard Storyboarding is simply a visual interpretation or visual sketch of your ideas for organizing your course site contents and activities and their relationship to one another.
14. Storyboard Benefits Overall view of course site/structure See the relationships/links of your course design See missing pieces Aids in organizing and or sequencing instruction
15. Tips Keep your levels of information to a minimum. Try to avoid folders inside of other folders. This makes it more likely that students will miss course material because it is buried too deeply.
16. Think “Units of Instruction” Structure learning paths Break your content into logical units or topics Be consistent Vary content and resources If possible, integrate activities such as discussions, assessments and assignments
17. Redesign for Online Design with scanning in mind Small “chunks” of information Take advantage of formatting techniques Add text descriptions for links, folders and modules so students clearly understand what they are viewing before they click.
18. Recommended Course Components Course Syllabus includes: Course learning objectives Detailed assignment explanations Grading polices Course schedule in one place and easy to print Course texts and where to purchase those texts Policies regarding plagiarism Policies regarding late assignments and missed classes Policies regarding disabilities (see http://www.umassd.edu/catls/resources/nfi_resources/teach_dss_syllabus.cfm) Policies regarding incompletes Faculty member introductory and contact information Faculty member office hours (or offer Chat office hours)
19. Recommended Course Components Communication Policies: Faculty member's email response time Discussion board and chat room etiquette guidelines Procedures for course questions (i.e. a general Q&A discussion board)
20. Recommended Course Components Course Specific Information for Students includes: How often students should access site How often students should check course email Reminders to students for checking site for announcements Reading expectations Participation requirements
21. Recommended Course Components Welcome Statement Overview of course Course tour Getting help Orientation to Your LMS Announcements Calendar
28. Discussion Board and Critical Engagement Susan M. Cannata, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
29. Main Objectives for Discussion Board To create forums to discuss reading assignments To foster critical engagement with reading assignments To create a site where faculty and students can interact with each other
30. How to Accomplish Objectives Have a separate site, e.g., assignment descriptions, where you explain what exactly you want in Dboard Provide initial thread/s Model the kinds of posts you want to see Reinforce the good practices of students
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34. What you can also accomplish with DBoard: Use student posts as teaching moments Establish good habits in forums that carry over into other assignments Create a record of discussions for review
36. Voice Boards and Wikis Jen RileyAcademic Directory of Online Education
37. Voice Boards Voice Boards Learning objective: students learn pace, tone, and sound of poetry Learning objective: students practice speaking extemporaneously online Learning objective: students practice critical thinking verbally
49. Guiding Principles Find the right tool to fit the desired learning outcome Keep it simple Don’t over use bells and whistles Start small Let the instruction guide the technology use Reusability
50. Asynchronous Wikis Ancient Art and Culture of Mexico Blogs UMassD Blog Hosting System http://blogs.umassd.edu/
52. Self-Paced/Reusable Learning Objects Embedded Streaming Video Seneca Reflections Tutorial Online Course Design Strategies Narrated PowerPoint 19th Century Women’s Movement
53. Thank You For more information: http://instructionaldev.umassd.wikispaces.net/Sloan+Workshop
Hinweis der Redaktion
Step back to reexamine course learning objectives..... considering some course redesign questions. Not simply about transferring course materials to the web format, but designing activities that engage and challenge and take advantage of the learning opportunities that some of the technologies offerIn terms of a blended course (hybrid), How can we effectively integrate the face to face activities with the online activities “the mix” so they connect with one another?How will students move through the course materials? Can students work though the material at his/her own pace or do they need to follow a set schedule? How will you organize your course content? Course design template
Take inventory of all materials and resources you are planning to use for your course, what file format and determine what needs to be converted to the online environment.Begin to organize and plan your site by organizing content into modules or units of instruction. How you decide to organize is up to you, but typically content is organized into modules by topic, activity or week. The goal here to create a simple clear and straightforward design that the learner can navigate and clearly understand.
you will need to carefully organize and design your course in such a way that not only helps your students achieve the learning objectives but is also functional and intuitive One way to do that is through storyboarding., creating a flowchart, site map of your course structure.Why? gives you an overall view of your structure how each is related what may be missing and helps you to design how the learner will flow through the course site. Bubbl.usYou can also use Microsoft Word PowerPoint, index cards, or even sticky notes to graphically represent your course site ideas. great free web based mind mapping tools that you can use on the web. Resources at the end of the workshop.The boxes can represent a course component such as a syllabus, tool, folder or module/unit of instruction. You can or delete sections as needed. Additionally, you should insert arrows as necessary indicating how the course components connect to one another. This also important to show others colleagues, people like myself ,to get some feedback.
provides overall structure of course decide what key course components will appear on the homepage what is the first thing you want students to see when they enter the site? , what should be organized into folders or modulesrefer to sample flowchart in packetThis also important to show others colleagues, people like myself ,to get some feedback. Flow chart template
a learning module which can help to structure learning paths for students to take through your course content and activities. Think of Learning Modules as “units of instruction” which provide a table of contents that links individual content files and other resources and makes it easier to guide students through the course material. A key advantage to the learning module is the ability to easily integrate many types of components, tools and resources together into one module. Additionally, a learning module provides an action menu for additional navigation, link to discussions, goals, references, bookmarks, note-taking and printing.
You will want to consider breaking up large amounts of text based material into smaller “chunks” of information. Think of breaking your content into units or modules of instruction. The smaller units would then be saved as individual files that could be organized or logically sequenced into a learning module. As a general rule, keep individual file length to the size of one 8.5 x 11 page or less to minimize scrolling.Use headings and subheadings to separate text. Utilize formatting techniques like bolding, italics, and color (use sparingly)to emphasize important information.Use bulleted lists.Use hyperlinks to larger sized documents that can be opened and printed.Utilize tables for organizing data and columns of information.Use graphics and images to enhance/break up your text. Create appropriate contrast between text and background. Usually dark text on light background. (use traditional black text on white background for best printing results) Add text descriptions for links, folders and modules so students clearly understand what they are viewing before they click. Using consistent icons to represent various activities throughout your course can help to keep students on track.