Skip to main content

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

Rss Feed Group items tagged

1More

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

  •  
    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.

Using PowerPoint in on-line courses (and f2f classes) - 2 views

started by David Jenkins on 10 Jul 14 no follow-up yet
4More

Best Practices in Teaching Online: Creating an Online Syllabus - 11 views

  •  
    Graphics-based exampled of questions to answer in the syllabus. Ignoring the ugly UT brown color, this is a bulleted document that offers good points in simple fashion.
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    Hi Brent, I love this resource! I might even add/revise a bit from the syllabus template that I've provided...at least I'll double check to see the cross-references. Thanks!
  •  
    This lays a lot of information out nicely and is especially helpful in thinking about what the students need to get oriented to the class. Hideous brown, though, it's true.
  •  
    I agree with all the above, including the poor color choice, however ... am I the only once feeling daunted and this point? I am beginning to wonder if it takes a certain "type" of faculty member to create an appropriate online course - someone who can think and manage in multiple platforms, constantly, both synchronously and asynchronously!! What about all the rest of our work engagements? how do they fit in?
2More

The Beginner's Guide To Google In The Classroom - Edudemic - 0 views

  •  
    As we move into different modalities, it is nice to remember that our students will arrive in our classroom familiar with these technologies. As the use of on-line tools increase in public education, our students will arrive with a baseline comfort level with the google tools, which still remain robust for many activities. These graphics really bring this home.
3More

4Faculty - 3 views

  •  
    by John Sullivan Why Change? Author provides a practical step-by-step manual for using MS Publisher to design an attractive syllabus.
  •  
    Ed, I love this option, however in the SON, we are constrained to use the "approved syllabi" by the Curriculum Committee. The belief and supported information tends to validate that consistency among the courses is easier for the students who are enrolled in multiple courses to "find" the information. The creative in me longs for this Publisher option, but the pragmatist must follow the rules!
  •  
    Hi Ed! Just to follow up on Phyllis' comment - unfortunately, the standardized syllabus is really useful at accreditation time. Accrediting bodies like to be able to see that particular outcomes are being addressed (for example) and having uniform syllabi makes it simpler for departments and schools to demonstrate that. I'm sure that those in our cohort who are administrators can speak more authoritatively about this (and I hope I'm not stating the obvious :)
1 - 6 of 6
Showing 20 items per page