Skip to main content

Home/ Emory College Strategies for Online Teaching/ Group items tagged EFOT

Rss Feed Group items tagged

David Fisher

WPA Outcomes Statement for First-Year Composition (3.0), Approved July 17, 2014 | Counc... - 0 views

  •  
    One of the most important professional documents in my field is the Council of Writing Program Administrators (CWPA) Outcomes Statement. This statement, the result of years of collaboration and revision, defines general learning outcomes for first-year composition (FYC) courses. Most importantly for others in our EFOT class, the statement contains sections that explain how faculty in all programs and departments can build on the preparation students receive in FYC.
Leah Chuchran

EFOT eCATs - M4 Live Session - Google Slides - 1 views

  •  
    M4 Slides for live session
  •  
    Leah, Thank you for this - it was a lot to absorb in the hour-long session and this will make it easier.
anonymous

Online teaching-A universal pedagogy - 4 views

Serendipitously - yesterday I signed up for their Coursera course. I was thinking of watching it (reading materials, seeing their format, etc) while conducting our EFOT course. It has just started.

online teaching pedagogy

Leah Chuchran

Survey of Faculty Attitudes on Technology @insidehighered - 1 views

  •  
    The survey sought to dig deeper on the quality question, asking respondents which aspects of credit-bearing online courses they think can be better than, or at least equal to, those of in-person courses. Faculty members say they think online courses are the same quality as or better than face-to-face classes in terms of grading and communicating about grading, and in communicating with the college about logistical and other issues. And professors were split 50/50 (the same or better vs. lower quality) on online courses' "ability to deliver the necessary content to meet learning objectives."
  •  
    "Much of the faculty consternation in the last year about how institutions (and, increasingly, state legislators) want to use online education has revolved around the perceived quality of online offerings (although there are undoubtedly undercurrents of concern about whether colleges and universities will use technology to diminish the role of, and ultimately the need for, instructors)." Read more: http://www.insidehighered.com/news/survey/survey-faculty-attitudes-technology#ixzz38WwyClaW Inside Higher Ed I think it's interesting that indicators of 'quality' that were considered important (by faculty) included whether or not the online course was offered for credit. But, there are plenty of for-credit courses offered at accredited colleges in a traditional format that are pretty....bad. And I think that the EFOT course has given us the clear indication that online courses almost need instructors MORE than traditional f2f courses.
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page