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The Effective Online Classroom: IDEAS from Those in the Teaching Trenches Faculty Development Session #11 Tuesday, September 25, 2012 10 am CT

The Effective Online Classroom:

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The Effective Online Classroom:. IDEAS from Those in the Teaching Trenches. Faculty Development Session #11 Tuesday, September 25, 2012 10 am CT. New Bb, New Look…. Your Key to a Successful Course. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Effective Online Classroom:

The Effective Online Classroom:

IDEAS from Those in the Teaching Trenches

Faculty Development Session #11Tuesday, September 25, 2012 10 am CT

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New Bb, New Look…

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Your Key to a Successful Course A well-organized course and a clean course with your

expert content and instruction is the FIRST step to retaining our students!

Maintain a master course in your development shells and use it to course copy. CCC - Clean Course Copies

Ask for assistance from your Instructional Designer. Use Blackboard-to-Go! Next, go one step further by

including an element in your course to engage and connect with your students.

Use the Quality Matters Rubric for a self check of design.

http://www.troy.edu/etroy/etroyfacultyresources.htm#

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General Standard #1 from the Quality Matters Rubric: “The overall design of the course is made clear to the student at the beginning of the course.”

Start Here!

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Faculty Resources tab in Blackboard

Faculty Development/Bb-To-Go! document

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Ideas from Those Teaching

in the Trenches…

Blackboard-To-Go …take this one step beyond and add in innovative “extras” to your

next course! Consider new approaches to Class Discussions, Assignments,

Assessments…CONNECTION and ENGAGEMENT with your students!

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Ideas from Those in the Teaching Trenches…

Dr. Carroll – using videosDr. Valkyrie – group discussions / rubricsDr. McDaniel – online student presentationsDr. Toner – transitioning from in-class to online -

connection

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IDEAS from Those in the Teaching Trenches

iTunes U Videos

Purpose: Deliver engaging video content to students

iTunes U: Benefits:• Built directly into Blackboard• iTunes hosts the videos (BB struggles with this)• Students can consume content however they like (e.g., computer, iPhone, iPad, etc.)Drawbacks:• Students have to have access to iTunes

Lessons learned:• Keep it simple (less is more)• You must also have screencasting software (I use Camtasia)• Students do not need (or want) to see you delivering a lecture• Be organized• Plan on updating every few years• Not just for lectures – tutorial videos

How To:• Must have iTunes installed on computer• Must activate iTunes U for your course• Record videos, edit, and then upload through Blackboard• Tell students about it; have them subscribe

You can do it!

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IDEAS from Those in the Teaching Trenches - Rubrics

Class Group Discussions / Rubrics

Criteria Assessment• Clear assessment criteria presented before task

begins*• Clear accurate feedback that focuses on

processes over which student has control• Contingent, accurate feedback increases sense

of control and improve attribution accuracy (Jones & Berglas, 1978; Kimble & Hirt, 2005; Thompson, 2004; Thompson & Richards, 2001)

Normative Assessment• Avoid – norming performance based on the “top

achievers” in class – don’t post class averages (Thompson, 2004; Thompson & Richards, 2001)

Avoid assumptions• Do not assume that a student “knows” how to

prepare the best answer• Illusive ill-defined criteria and expectations

require students to become mind readers – increasing chances of plagiarism and/or self-handicapping for the more at-risk

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Higher Expectations

20-25 Points◦ Discussion posting is responsive to

and exceeds the requirements of the discussion instructions: Responds to the question being

asked or the prompt provided Goes beyond what is required in

some meaningful way (e.g. contribute a new dimension, unearth something unanticipated, etc.)

Are substantive, reflective, and evidenced based

Demonstrates that the student has read, viewed, and considered the learning resources and/or a sampling of colleagues’ postings

Well written and free of spelling and grammar errors

20-25 Points Discussion postings and responses are responsive to and

exceed the requirements of the basic points Discussion instructions. They:◦ Respond to the entire question (all

components/aspects) being asked or the prompt provided (approximate word count will be 400 words);

◦ Provided additional information (referred to the original essays, provide empirical research information with proper citations – minimum of three empirical articles – if you are not sure what this means – you must contribute comments from three peer-reviewed articles from professional journals;

◦ Go beyond what is required in some meaningful way (e.g. contributes a new dimension, unearth something unanticipated, etc..);

◦ Are substantive, reflective, evidence based; supported by In-post citations and references are in APA format;

◦ Demonstrate that the student has read, viewed, and considered the learning resources and a sampling of colleagues' postings;

◦ Have carried on the discussion with at least one colleague over several days

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IDEAS from Those in the Teaching Trenches - Rubrics

Help avoid the perceived “limitations of holistic grading”◦ Avoid biases – race, ethnicity, gender

Avoid difficulty in maintaining “cognitive constancy” and grading fatigue

A potentially clearer base for grading

Focus our learning goals and help us in instruction development.

May help us develop a “learner-centered” environment (Cullen & Harris, 2009)

Help avoid the perceived “limitations of holistic grading” (Sadler, 2009, p. 174)

◦ Avoid biases – race, ethnicity, gender◦ Avoid difficulty in maintaining “cognitive constancy” (p. 174) and grading fatigue◦ Avoid halo effect – influence based on personality characteristics◦ Avoid making students work toward the teacher’s preferences or tastes◦ Avoid lack of student’s lack of control to belong in the normative group

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IDEAS from Those in the Teaching Trenches – Small Groups

Provides opportunity for “inter-teaching” and “scaffolding” to develop.

Creates a potentially safer and more intimate learning experience.

Yet members, when groups work well, challenge all to become more critical thinkers.

Students report a favorable outcome…

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Online Student Presentations

Dr. Dayna McDaniel– LET’s TALK! Our students need to practice verbalizing their thoughts. 2 tools for this online:

Online Presentations Collaborate• Slides• 5-7 minute presentation• Respond to classmate questions• They choose from assigned times

on Discussion Board• Post PowerPoint's a day early• Same idea can be great for a

group presentation (with critical review of archive)

• Lesson: Mistakes are acceptable

Voice Board Discussions• Substitute for Discussion board• Its audio and writing• Very easy to use• Always have submit a ticket if there

is a problem• Everything in the assignments

section• Lesson: Students enjoy variety

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Collaborate on Phone

STUDENT PRESENTATION ON WIMBA

Voice Board Discussion

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IDEAS from Those in the Teaching Trenches

In-Class vs. Online - challenges

Dr. Barbara Toner – “I am really pleased with how well I sense a connection with the students as that was mybiggest worry going from in-class to online teaching.

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Q: Am I able, on-line, to create a safe, comfortable space for students which would allow them to be introspective and open, not guarded and closed? This is Psychology I teach, and assimilation of concepts is vital; providing a safe learning environment is fundamental. Am I able to provide that through an on-line classroom?

A: From my one experience, I found that I could. In fact, one of the students started discussing his learning disability and we were able, as a cohesive unit, to respond appropriately and effectively. The other students were able to offer support and encouragement just as they would in any safe environment.

Q: Can I adapt andragogical models of learning to my adult on-line students? A: Once again, my experience was that I can and I did.

Q: What kind of support may I request from my faculty guide and my e-Troy guardian angel?

A: Fabulous support! They were there when I needed them, but they were there without being intrusive or overbearing. They were truly “guiding angels”.

Q: Is there an established on-line syllabus which I might use as a basis for creating my own?

A: Definitely! Again, our faculty peers have been wonderful sharing their experiences, their knowledge, and their syllabi.

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WHY DO I HAVE TO PUT IN A TICKET?

For PROMPT service.

So we can assist YOU efficiently!

helpdesk.troy.edu

See the FACULTY RESOURCES tab for:Instructional Design ContactCourse-Specific Designer Assignments

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Thank you!

__________________________

CONTACT your INSTRUCTIONAL DESIGNER: (on the Faculty Resource tab in Blackboard)

http://troy.blackboard.com/bbcswebdav/institution/Instructional%20Design/Web/InstructionalDesign.htmlor email us @

[email protected]

“Have us take a look at your course and make suggestions…”

__________________________

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Questions?Thank you for investing in this training!

Dr. Michael Carroll, [email protected]

Dr. Karena Valkyrie, [email protected]

Dr. Dayna McDaniel, [email protected]

Dr. Barbara Toner, [email protected]

Gayle Nelson, ID, [email protected]

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