Skip to main content

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

Rss Feed Group items tagged

dseeman

What Is Successful Technology Integration? - 1 views

  •  
    "Technology integration is the use of technology resources -- computers, mobile devices like smartphones and tablets, digital cameras, social media platforms and networks, software applications, the Internet, etc. -- in daily classroom practices, and in the management of a school." I found this article helpful largely because it just reiterated that we need to set educational goals and then choose technology which is helpful, not the other way round.
Leah Chuchran

Why (and how) Teachers and Students Should Backchannel - 2 views

  •  
    This article provides an overview of the benefits of a "backchannel" (such as Twitter and todaysmeet.com). It also explains ways to go about implementing Twitter into the classroom. Finally, the article touches on digital literacy (also web literacy skills). This article will be particularly useful for M4 and beyond.
jadamski

Innovative learning activities - 0 views

  •  
    Interesting article using powerpoint to enhance unfolding case studies for nursing education
jtsass

Instructional Design Models-Framework for Innovative Teaching and Learning Methodologies - 0 views

  •  
    Great comparison of some of the models with application
imeldareyes

Be Efficient, Not Busy: Time Management Strategies for Online Teaching - Faculty Focus ... - 3 views

  •  
    Online teaching redefines the faculty member's schedule. The feeling of being a 24/7 professor can lead to frustration. Managing one's time as an online teacher can be a challenge. As the popularity of online education continues to grow, teaching faculty need to develop effective time management behaviors to be efficient and not just busy.
  •  
    Thank you for sharing this! I find the tips all very useful. As one example, I am going to give the students a syllabus quiz, for sure. When I took the Zaption quiz Leah prepared during M1, I was a bit surprised by how much information my brain did not retain reading through the course guidelines. The quiz was obviously helpful.
imeldareyes

EVIDENCE-BASED NURSING EDUCATION: EFFECTIVE USE OF INSTRUCTIONAL DESIGN AND SIMULATED L... - 0 views

  •  
    This article discusses using the ADDIE model in developing nursing simulation exercises.
Susan Tamasi

An Instructional Design Model for Intercultural Language Teaching: A Proposed Model - 2 views

  •  
    This article talks specifically about the applications of the ADDIE model and the Dick & Carey Model for teaching about culture and intercultural communication. While the authors talk about an English as a Second Language course in Vietnam, their instructional design can be used for any course looks at cultural norms, including languages, linguistics, anthropology, sociology, and human health. Also, while their plans are not specific to an online course, their ideas transfer to an online or hybrid course quite easily. I was really pleased to find this article, especially as it supports my own ideas about using a hybrid of these two models to teach about intercultural communication. It makes concrete the theoretical assignments and organizational tips that I had in mind. I know I will come back to it often.
marshallduke

Pennebaker, Gosling: New generation of online classes benefits students - Houston Chron... - 1 views

  •  
    This article has a follow up major piece in the June 24 issue of the Chronicle of Higher Education. I cannot send that one to you because it is "locked." However, this piece describes what two very famous psychologists, Gosling and Pennebaker, are doing at UT Austin with online psychology classes. They describe here a synchronous massive online course in which (as now described in the Chronicle, they have 1500! students registered. Twenty four students are invited to attend F2F classes twice per week and the rest are online live. This SMOC, as they term it, allows faculty to interact live with an audience while teaching but affords huge enrollments. This seems to me to be a way of maintaining the "feel" of F2F while benefiting from the usefulness of technology. This is a very interesting development and, with these two psychologists being so well known, teachers of large lecture classes will take notice. I would love to explore the idea further!
  •  
    This is pretty amazing! I wondered to what extent this was also a flipped class - did students do their readings and watch lectures before coming to class, and in the synchronous sessions, mostly focus on solving problems through group discussion? It seems to require a lot of technological and instructional support: TV studio, laptops, apps, and tutors serving as group advisors, but the better learning outcome may make it all worth it! Of course, at 500 students a class, it could save cost in a big way, too. So, are we all prepared to face the camera? :)
Yu Li

Tips and Tricks for Teaching Online: How to Teach Like a Pro! - 1 views

  •  
    OK. Here is the other article I promised. My interest was to find out about the principle of redundancy, but this article is not just about that. Editor's Note : Effective online learning requires careful preparation, design, implementation, and follow-up. This article combines best practices from a variety of resources - research studies, publications, and discussions among online instructors. The analogy of a garden is used to reinforce practices that will ensure a successful "harvest!"
  •  
    Hi Yu, I like this article. For some points, I had not thought about them. Thanks for sharing.
dseeman

Report from the Field--Assessment in Anthropology - 0 views

  •  
    This short blog by an anthropology professor resonated very much with my own state of mind out this. The importance of doing assessment right, alongside the numbing effects of assessment as a hugely time consuming new set of bureaucratic requirements. In the end, the author provides some really helpful reminders about how this works in practice. It helped me to realize that assessment itself is a topic we need to continually assess, for our own educational goals.
Yu Li

Promoting Student Self-Assessment - ReadWriteThink - 0 views

  •  
    Although the target readership is grade 6-12 instructors, I find the methodology in this article applicable to what we are trying to do. Give it a read and see what you think.
Leah Chuchran

Face - to - Face versus Online Course Evaluations: A "Consumer's Guide" to Seven Strate... - 0 views

  •  
    This article outlines some ways to evaluate online courses - get faculty involved from the start and develop the rating scales...Is this authentic evaluation?
annmassey

The Flipped Classroom - UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy - 0 views

  •  
    Several professors at UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy have embraced the flipped classroom model. View this video to see The Flipped Classroom: Innovations in Teaching and Learning in action by all of the divisions in the school.
  •  
    This goes to the UNC Eshelman SOP site and there are a lot of interesting, practical links here. I thought it was very useful and I hope even those of you who are teaching less science-based content will find it helpful.
annmassey

e-assessment by design: using multiple choice questions to good effect - 1 views

  •  
    Over the last decade, larger student numbers, reduced resources and increasing use of new technologies have led to the increased use of multiple-choice questions (MCQs) as a method of assessment in higher education courses. This paper identifies some limitations associated with MCQs from a pedagogical standpoint....
  •  
    Trying to catch up and get ahead as I leave town this week :) I teach beginning undergraduates in typically large (150+ students) classes, often with little or no (or ineffective) TA assistance. Multiple choice questions are an absolute necessity as a management tool. I find that many of my colleagues in traditional liberal arts colleges think that multiple choice questions are unacceptable as a means of student assessment. However, I've noticed that many of the online adaptive learning tools and licensing exams required by many professional programs (nursing among them...) are also based primarily on multiple choice questions. I looked for an article to rebut the reading from the flaguide website (http://www.flaguide.org/) which stated, "...the multiple choice test..... [is] usually most effective at measuring fact-based knowledge and the ability to perform algorithmic problem-solving...However, if our goals include different student outcomes than these....then this assessment technique will not provide useful feedback about attainment of these goals." The above article gives several ideas for creating and using multiple choice questions to assess higher order thinking, my favorite being the idea of assigning scores based not only on student answers to the questions but also their confidence in their answer. I also liked the idea of the self-tests that students can take repeatedly to check their mastery of concepts, which seems to play into the instructional design loops that we were studying in M3.
edphillips

Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives [Ki... - 0 views

This book is a few years old, but I read it last week for the first time. I agree with original NYTimes reviewer, who says the arguments of ths book seems both obvious and novel at the same time....

technology student engagement active learning passive

started by edphillips on 21 Jul 14 no follow-up yet
Leah Chuchran

gradechange.pdf - 0 views

  • The number of students taking at least one online course increased by over 411,000 to a new total of 7.1 million.
  •  
    January 2014 Tracking Online Education in the U.S. report
davidrdavis3

Comparing Modes of Instruction: The Relative Efficacy of On-Line and In-Person Teaching... - 0 views

This is a little dated but has an interesting empirical foundation.

online teaching student engagement

started by davidrdavis3 on 15 Jul 15 no follow-up yet
Lynn Bertrand

The Technology Source Archives - Using the Project Approach to Online Course Development - 2 views

  •  
    Because the early planning stages of online instruction are crucial, Diane Chapman and Todd Nicolet propose a 'project approach' to course Development: a formal, team-based operation that makes use of consistent standards, trackable processes, standardized tools, and structured communication to facilitate technology initiatives of all sizes. This appears to facilitate scaling and the design and development of online instruction while maintaining the quality and integrity of the courses. Course design and development become more manageable when they are translated into repeatable processes and easy-to-apply tools.
  •  
    This is very similar to Strategy 6: Apply Project Planning and Management Methods to Course Development in last weeks reading, "Effective Workload Management Strategies for the Online Environment".
« First ‹ Previous 161 - 180 of 246 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page