Syllabus design - magazine style - 2 views
Padagogy Wheel - 2 views
Hess, Engaging Technology in Theological Education - 0 views
Technology, Pedagogy, and Transformation in Theological Education - 1 views
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This is a multi-authored article that appeared in the journal Teaching Theology and Religion. I participated in the composition but the reason I am posting it is not my own little section on multi-sensory imagery but rather the part by Russell Haitch which discusses long distance education in the New Testament--the Apostle Paul to be specific. Haitch (as I recall) makes a good case that examples like this one show that one really communicate effectively and passionately, from a long distance, for the purpose of educational transformation. So, if you look at this, zero in on Haitch's case study.
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.
Using Asynchronous Audio Feedback to Enhance Teaching Presence and Students' Sense of C... - 0 views
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This paper reports the findings of a case study in which audio feedback replaced text-based feedback in asynchronous courses. Previous research has demonstrated that participants in online courses can build effective learning communities through text based communication alone. Similarly, it has been demonstrated that instructors for online courses can adequately project immediacy behaviors using text-based communication.
Using Audio Feedback in online classes - 1 views
Photo Prompts - Online Discussions - 3 views
Five Pedagogical Practices to Improve Your Online Course | Faculty Focus - 4 views
Mazzolini and Maddison, "When to Jump In: The Role of the Instructor in Online Discussi... - 0 views
Lost in Translation - 0 views
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