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Leah Chuchran

Active and Collaborative Learning Storify project - 1 views

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    this storify consists of active learning videos and resources - may want to view the Tools to Encourage Active Learning from the Hawaii Arts Alliance - this was a fun in-class activity
Leah Chuchran

Creating effective student engagement in online courses: What do students find engaging? - 0 views

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    While this paper set out to discover what activities and/or interaction channels might be expected to lead to more highly engaged student s, what it found was a bit different. After first creating a scale to measure online student engagement, and then surveying 186 students from six campuses in the Midwest, the results indicate that there is no particular activity that will automatically help students to be more engaged in online classes. However, the results also suggest that multiple communication channels may be related to higher engagement and that student-student and instructor-student communication are clearly strongly correlated with higher student engagement with the course, in general. Thus, advice for online instructors is still to use active learning but to be sure to incorporate meaningful and multiple ways of interacting with students and encouraging/requiring students to interact with each other.
Phyllis Wright

How to Design Effective Online Group Work Activities Faculty Focus | Faculty Focus - 2 views

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    This article had some great ideas for meaningful online collaborative work.
srodge5

Bloom's Digital Taxonomy - 2 views

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    This article applies Bloom's Learning Taxonomy to online teaching, suggesting concrete activities to promote each phase of student learning.
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    Love concrete activities :)
sheilatefft

Tutor Messaging and Its Effectiveness in Encouraging Student Participation on Computer ... - 0 views

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    This study focuses on the presence of the teacher in the virtual classroom and how the instructor interacts with the students. Can an instructor's behavior encourage more student activity? Certainly, but it has to be more than the occasional "well done," the authors say. Students want more teacher presence, specifically more frequent responses, more acknowledgement of individuals' contribution, and more suggestions and guidance related to a specific response. So the bottom line is try to respond to individual students rather than a group and customize your comments as much as possible. You will have more engaged students.
Christine Ristaino

Journal of Online Learning and Teaching / Building Community in the On-line Classroom - 1 views

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    Introduction It is generally agreed that learning involves interaction and that it is a communal activity (McMillan & Chavis, 1986; Sarason, 1974). The traditional setting where communal learning activity occurs has been the in-person classroom; however, with the advent of technology that is no longer the case.
phildavis9

Online Class Size and Performance - 0 views

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    The University of Toronto performed a study on the relationship to class size, class participation and grades. It included 25 courses with 25 instructors and 341 students. The conclusion was that students performed well in small online classes and that performance, defined as participation and grades, declined proportionally as class size increased. The study also looked at small group activities and found that large class performance improved by using small group activities. It also emphasized the importance of the software used for the small group discussions.
annmassey

The Community of Learning and Educational Structure - 0 views

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    This also is another fairly short read from the pre-digital era (ie, 1990s). (I'm trying to spare you all the 21-page scholarly works). If you looked at the learning object at the CoI community of inquiry, this parallels the short video about traditional education models and preparing students to be nimble, active and adaptable thinkers in rapidly changing environments - something we worry about a lot in healthcare education.
Leah Chuchran

Padagogy Wheel - 2 views

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    Based on Blooms Taxonomy and apps, this creates a specialty in aligning outcomes with activities
jcoconn

Curtis, D. D., & Lawson, M. J. (2001). Exploring collaborative online learning. Journal... - 0 views

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    Curtis and Lawson (2001) looked for "evidence of good quality interactions among students who are not present in the one physical site from data obtained from students' online exchanges" (p. 21). They focused on the "depth of on-task activity" (p. 21) in an asynchronous situation, which they argue is the most common form of online courses, of a small collaborative learning group. They found that "the analysis of participants' postings reveals many of the behaviors associated with collaborative learning in face-to face situations" (p. 29). However, "the students spontaneously demonstrated a need also to use synchronous communication" (p. 24). Some did this via text or email, often when they did not agree with another student and some organized synchronous chat sessions. This shows that "there is a need to incorporate among the asynchronous interactions…opportunities for real-time interactions among students" (p. 29).
marshallduke

Psychological characteristics in cognitive presence of communities of inquiry: A lingui... - 2 views

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    The centrality of teaching actively comes up a lot. All is not lost! Teaching presence is the key to social and cognitive presences.
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    This study affirms the need to attend to individual differences among learners. Whatever technologies we use or approaches we take, we need to keep in mind that there will be significant variation in how students use all these components of the course. Aim too low and we lose the top to boredom. Aim too low and we lose the bottom to confusion. I think this means we need to be reactive and be ready to alter plans and methods as needed. Leah demonstrated this when she made the group project optional.
murasimo

Bloom's Taxonomy (revised) - 1 views

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    snapchat on how to apply Bloom's Taxonomy
ddever

Combining Technologies to Engage the Online Learner - 1 views

Cutting-Edge Social Media Approaches to Business Education: Teaching with LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, Second Life, and Blogs, Charles Wankel, St. John's University (Editor) (ISBN: P1617351164) Is ...

student engagement course design online learning active learning technology

started by ddever on 31 Jan 15 no follow-up yet
murasimo

Merrill's First Principles of Instruction - 0 views

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    Very short, clear and cute video about the principles of instruction by Dr. Merrill
jadamski

Innovative learning activities - 0 views

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    Interesting article using powerpoint to enhance unfolding case studies for nursing education
Susan Tamasi

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

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    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.
mevenden

Using a Design Framework to Create a Sense of Presence - 1 views

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    I've been concerned with translating of a sense of teacher's personal presence into online course design; while this article is brief (and maybe over-dependent on a graphic), it nevertheless invites specific choices of format, teaching strategies, instructor roles, and type of technology, all to the end of suggesting an active and engaging professorial presence.
Marimer Carrión

Teaching Literature Online - 1 views

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    This UCF website, prepared by Carissa Baker, explores the way in which many literature professors are "trying innovative technology strategies within the literature classroom to increase knowledge and engagement." With theoretical as well as practical sources, the site offers many ideas on student engagement and literature immersion; it also has a few videos with ideas for staging virtual worlds; and a starter bibliography with 10 articles on a range of topics, including virtual literature circles; native avatars, online hubs, and urban indian literature; victorian novels and technoRomanticism; using Tweeter in the Literature Classroom (hmm...); online teaching Old English; and hypertext use to enhance students reading experiences, among others.
Ian McFarland

A Tech-Happy Professor Reboots After Hearing His Teaching Advice Isn't Working - 1 views

shared by Ian McFarland on 26 Jun 13 - No Cached
Leah Chuchran liked it
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    Michael Wesch has been on the lecture circuit for years touting new models of active teaching with technology. The associate professor of cultural anthropology at Kansas State University has given TED talks. Wired magazine gave him a Rave Award. The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching once named him a national professor of the year.
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