"Description
The Learning to Teach Online project has been developed by COFA Online, an
academic unit at the College of Fine Arts, the University of New South Wales,
Sydney, Australia. It is designed to be practical and easy to access for
time-poor teachers. The video and PDF based episodes each examine specific
successful online teaching strategies from many different disciplines, offering
tips, guidance and pointing out the potential pitfalls to both novice and
experienced online teachers. Support for the COFA Online Learning to
Teach Online program has been provided by the Australian Learning and Teaching
Council Ltd, an initiative of the Australian Government Department of Education,
Employment and Workplace Relations. The views expressed in this
activity do not necessarily reflect the views of the Australian Learning and
Teaching Council. For more information and access to a global online
supportive community, please visit the Learning to Teach Online website
www.online.cofa.unsw.edu.au"
Teaching Strategies: Online TeachingOnline teaching is increasingly common at many types of higher education institutions, ranging from hybrid courses that offer a combination of in-person and online instruction, to fully online experiences and distance learning. The following resources provide guidelines for creating an online course, best practices for teaching online, and strategies for assessing the quality of online education.
"Learning analytics is the "measurement, collection, analysis and reporting of data about learners and their contexts, for purposes of understanding and optimising learning and the environments in which it occurs," according to the 1st International Conference on Learning Analytics and Knowledge.1 The NMC Horizon Report: 2012 Higher Education Edition notes that this promising set of practices and tools aims to "harness the power of advances in data mining, interpretation, and modeling to improve understandings of teaching and learning, and to tailor education to individual students more effectively."2 Finally, George Siemens and Phil Long have even proposed that learning analytics should ultimately be focused on disruption and transformation in education, changing the very nature of teaching, learning, and assessment as we know it.3"
Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPCK) attempts to capture some of the essential qualities of knowledge required by teachers for technology integration in their teaching, while addressing the complex, multifaceted and situated nature of teacher knowledge.
"In almost every area of human endeavor, the practice improves over time," says Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates. "That hasn't been the case for teaching." This month, Gates is sounding the alarm about public education in Waiting for "Superman," a new documentary from An Inconvenient Truth's Davis Guggenheim. "He has this amazing capacity to drill really, really deep," Guggenheim says of Gates. "He has an infectious curiosity." PARADE sat down with the software mogul turned philanthropist to talk about the movie, the American education system, and his own school days.
"I'm so tired of having the integration of technology into learning overlooked
because it's "too hard". As
educators -
actual professional
educators
, who actually go into classrooms every day and teach for a
living - we do
NOT
have the luxury of choosing whether we
should be integrating technology, or whether we want to learn more about it, or
whether we think it's relevant to the learning process.
It
is
, it's part of the job and if people don't think so, then they ought
to be getting a copy of the Saturday paper and looking for a something else to
do where they CAN be selective about what part of the job they are willing to
take seriously without it impacting on our future generations."
"explores learning, education, digital technologies, books,
poetry, literature, teaching, photography & the impact of social media. Your
commentary, collaboration and participation is encouraged & highly
valued!"
"How Might Our Students Benefit from a Flipped Classroom?
Harvard Physics Professor, Eric Mazur, uses peer instruction and just-in-time teaching to promote better learning. In the details of his strategy, students use class time to grapple with, discuss and find solutions to problems that have traditionally been given as homework assignments. Mazur believes this collaborative deconstruction and application leads to deeper discussions and better learning."
"Students today have instant access to information through technology and the web, manage their own acquisition of knowledge through informal learning, and have progressed beyond consumers of content to become producers and publishers. As a result, traditional teaching and learning methods are becoming less effective at engaging students and motivating them to achieve."