Skip to main content

Home/ Oregon State University Ecampus/ Group items tagged learning outcomes

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Shannon Riggs

Designing Purposeful Pathways for Student Achievement through Transparency and Problem-... - 2 views

  •  
    "W hat are your learning outcomes for all of your students?" "Do your students know that these are your expectations?" "Do students understand the relationship between their demonstrated achievement of your learning outcomes and their preparation for future success in life and work?"
Karen Watte

Learning Outcomes Rubric - 2 views

  •  
    Example of a rubric that helps IDs or course developers assess the quality of learning objectives in a course
Cub Kahn

Stop Assigning Team Projects...Unless... - 3 views

  •  
    Research findings: "Faculty who assign team projects without preparing their students to work in teams greatly increase the likelihood that students will have a negative experience and student learning and performance will suffer. Teaching teamwork content is necessary but not sufficient for important educational and performance outcomes. Providing ongoing teamwork support is critical to team success and student learning."
Shannon Riggs

COL - Online Course Design - 0 views

  •  
    The mission of the Center for Online Learning is to promote quality online courses. There is substantial research to indicate what constitutes best practice in online course design and delivery to achieve good student learning outcomes and satisfaction. It is the purpose of this site to set forth guidlines to achieve that end.
John Robertson

High Impact Online | Confessions of a Community College Dean @insidehighered - 1 views

  •  
    Folks who study student retention and success in community colleges are well-acquainted with the concept of "high-impact practices." They're a set of measures that have been shown through empirical research to make positive differences in student outcomes. The list of high-impact practices usually includes learning communities, service learning, writing-intensive courses, undergraduate research, internships, and capstone courses, among others.
  •  
    + useful bibliography in one of the comments
Cub Kahn

Good Quality Discussion is Necessary But Not Sufficient in Asynchronous Tuition: A Brie... - 3 views

  •  
    Abstract: The growth of online learning within education has corresponded to an increase in use of asynchronous discussion. Asynchronous discussion is a form of interaction that is mediated rather than directed, and is characterized by a time lag in the interactions between discussants. In this paper we conducted a brief narrative review of the literature on asynchronous discussion. We argue, initially, that discussion is necessary, but not sufficient, for successful pedagogic outcomes-especially in the case of online learning. We identified areas of agreement within the literature on what can be considered the key factors for successful asynchronous discussion.
Cub Kahn

Using a Capacity-Based Lens to Teach Positively - 2 views

  •  
    "Teaching positively means that we intentionally consider how we can enhance learning environments, while at the same time increase the ways learners can be successful. Teaching positively aims to not only motivate learners but rather emphasizes how to increase their personal ability to achieve the course learning outcomes."
Cub Kahn

A Cross-institutional Study of Instructional Characteristics and Student Outcomes: Are ... - 1 views

  •  
    "A student survey instrument was created that captures student perceptions of the instructional characteristics of their course, their learning, and their satisfaction with the course. The data collected from the student survey was merged with data from institutional student information systems (e.g., demographics and course grade)."
Cub Kahn

Bloom's Digital Taxonomy Verbs [Infographic] - 1 views

  •  
    "When using Bloom's Digital Taxonomy (a revised take on Bloom's devised by educator Andrew Churches), it helps to have a list of verbs to know what actions define each stage of the taxonomy. This is useful for lesson planning, rubric making, and any other teacher-oriented task requiring planning and assessment strategies." [Karen, thanks for passing this along!]
1 - 11 of 11
Showing 20 items per page