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alexandra m. pickett

Does Class Size Matter? - Distance Education Report Article - 1 views

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    Does class size matter? http://www.magnapubs.com/newsletter/distance-education-report/270/Does-Class-Size-Matter-13523-1.html This article originally appeared in Distance Education Report. I've been the director of online education at my institution since 2007. One question I've been asked many times over the years is "What is the optimal number of students to have in an online class?" My usual response is to pretend I didn't hear the question and walk away as quickly as possible. Well, that's not totally true. But as you can imagine, this is not an easy question to answer, as there are many variables that come into play--the topic of the class, the overall course design, the academic rank of students in the class, the experience of the instructor teaching the class, etc. I've had many interesting discussions with students, staff and administrators over the years about enrollments in online courses. When I first started teaching online, my courses would fill almost immediately, sometimes within minutes. Inevitably, students would contact me and request an override for the course - not just one or two students, but dozens upon dozens of students. They were usually surprised when I said no. These frustrated students would often reply with a comment such as, "But it's an online class, so you can take unlimited numbers of students and it won't be any additional work for you." Surprisingly, I've heard this kind of comment from some faculty, staff and administrators as well. I usually view these interactions as opportunities to offer a bit of education about online learning. So I might say, for example, that if I had seven graded assignments in my online course, and 25 students, I would end up grading 175 assignments--with the emphasis on "I." However, if I doubled the number of students in my class and graded seven assignments for 50 students, that would be 350 assignments to grade. There were also 22 quizzes, two exams and multiple
alexandra m. pickett

An Open Letter to Professor Edmundson | Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

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    "Given your critique of "online education," I find it ironic that learning designers and others who work day-in, day-out on online (and blended) learning spend much of our time saying similar things to our faculty partners and university stakeholders as you so eloquently articulated in the above quotes. The error that you make, and it is a fundamental error, is that you confuse what is going on at Stanford, Yale, Harvard, M.I.T. with edX and Coursera, with traditional online learning. You write as if you are critiquing online classes, but what you are really taking issue with are the new crop of massively open online courses (MOOCs). This error is not merely semantic. Confusing online learning with MOOCs disallows any meaningful analysis of the challenges and benefits of either format. Conflating online learning with MOOCs also closes the possibility of any substantive discussion of how institutions of higher education are responding to challenges around access, cost and quality. And perhaps most troubling, by conflating online learning with MOOCs you are mischaracterizing and devaluing the hard work of your fellow educators to bring the active learning principles, the principles that you yourself espouse, to new teaching modalities."
alexandra m. pickett

What Online Faculty Can Do to Avoid Burnout - 1 views

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    RT @ryanleighanders: What Online Faculty Can Do to Avoid Burnout - https://t.co/ua8zgl3HeU via @FacultyFocus #online #HigherEducation What Online Faculty Can Do to Avoid Burnout - https://t.co/ua8zgl3HeU via @FacultyFocus #online #HigherEducation - Ryan Anderson (ryanleighanders) http://twitter.com/ryanleighanders/status/952917842428616706
priyanshu1

Swiflearn - Benefits of Online Learning | Online Education | Online Tuition - 0 views

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    Benefits of Online Learning. The concept of online learning and gaining knowledge through online tuition is on the rise from the last few years - Swiflearn.
alexandra m. pickett

Creating an Effective Online Instructor Presence - effective-online-instructor-presence... - 3 views

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    CREATING AN EFFECTIVE ONLINE INSTRUCTOR PRESENCE / APRIL 2013Creating an Effective Online InstructorPresence
alexandra m. pickett

Twitter Chat with Inside Online Learning » Online College Search - Your Accre... - 0 views

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    #IOLchat today on "creating a new online course" http://t.co/DzWyMrvP today at 12pET! #onlinelearing #edchat #lrnchat RT @Melissa_Venable: Are you creating your first online course? Have advice to share? Join me for an open discussion today: #IOLchat htt ...
priyanshu1

Online Math Tutor Can Improve your Kid's Score | Swiflearn - 0 views

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    An Online Math Tutor Can Improve your Kid's Score with Online Tuition. Online education helps in building confidence - Swiflearn.
alexandra m. pickett

Examining the Effect of Proctoring on Online Test Scores | Alessio | Online Learning - 1 views

  • Full Text:
  • perception that academic integrity associated with online tests is compromised due to undetected cheating that yields artificially higher grades.
  • strategic interventions to address integrity, addressing disparate test scores, and validating student knowledge in online classes are discussed.
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    @alexpickett Also, I find this article interesting: Alessio, H.M., Malay, N., Maurer, K., Bailer, A.J. and Rubin, B. (2017). Examining the effect of proctoring on online test scores. Online Learning Journal, 21(1). https://t.co/gUIhyNIi6c"
alexandra m. pickett

Online Teaching: 15 Ways Online Educators Can Light Social Engagement Afire : InformED - 1 views

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    RT @LearnApplyShare: Excellent list! "Online Teaching: 15 Ways Online Educators Can Light Social Engagement Afire" http://t.co/i82fyOEwj ...
alexandra m. pickett

SUNY Ulster Online Learning Courses Selected as Models for SUNY Learning Network - onli... - 1 views

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    "SUNY Ulster Online Learning Courses Selected as Models for SUNY Learning Network "
Stephen Mann

M.I.T. Game-Changer: Free Online Education For All - Forbes - 0 views

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    M.I.T. offered free online classes, now it plans a free online degree/certificate if you take their free online classes.
alexandra m. pickett

The Potential for Online Learning: Promises and Pitfalls (EDUCAUSE Review) | EDUCAUSE.edu - 1 views

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    " The Potential for Online Learning: Promises and Pitfalls"
alexandra m. pickett

RT @jaymelinton: Top 10 Rules for Developing Your First Online Course http://t.co/0UfXm... - 0 views

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    RT @jaymelinton: Top 10 Rules for Developing Your First Online Course http://t.co/0UfXmmp5D1 #elearning
alexandra m. pickett

Online Ed Skepticism and Self-Sufficiency: Survey of Faculty Views on Technology @insid... - 2 views

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    RT @drdavidwicks: Online Ed Skepticism and Self-Sufficiency: Survey of Faculty Views on Technology: https://t.co/oIXKdRean8 #aln14 #edtech Online Ed Skepticism and Self-Sufficiency: Survey of Faculty Views on Technology: https://t.co/oIXKdRean8 #aln14 #edtech - David Wicks (drdavidwicks) http://twitter.com/drdavidwicks/status/527400980934311936
alexandra m. pickett

College Degrees Without Going to Class - Room for Debate Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Karen Swan is the James Stukel Distinguished Professor of Educational Leadership at the University of Illinois Springfield and an expert on online and blended learning.
  • One study, commissioned by the U.S. Department of Education, did a meta-analysis of 51 reports on online instruction comparing student outcomes in online, blended and/or face-to-face environments. It found that students who took all or part of their classes online performed better, and that the effectiveness of online and blended instruction was broad across variations in students, types of programs and content areas.
  • Answers from 31,000 students at 58 institutions revealed that even after controlling for age, gender, major, type of institution and number of fully online courses taken, technology use was positively related to categories of engagement measured by NSSE benchmarks (for example, active and collaborative learning and student-faculty interaction), deep approaches to learning and self-reported learning outcomes.
alexandra m. pickett

Quia - 0 views

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    Quia is pronounced key-uh and is short for Quintessential Instructional Archive. Quia provides a variety of educational services, including: * A directory of thousands of online games and quizzes in more than 40 subject areas * Templates for creating twelve different types of online games, including flashcards, matching, concentration (memory), word search, hangman, challenge board, and rags to riches (a quiz-show style trivia game) * Tools for creating online quizzes * Quiz administration and reporting tools * Free teacher home pages
alexandra m. pickett

New York Network Home - 0 views

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    offers a great variety of video resources in several disciplines which SUNY faculty may excerpt to use in their online courses. A list of programming resources, including Annenberg/CPB (see their video catalog http://www.learner.org/catalog/catalog.html ) can be found at the following address: http://www.nyn.suny.edu/cable/programming.htm\ . If you would like to adapt any of these materials to your online course, please send your request to: geotucker@nyn.suny.edu See their online video catalog for a partial list of program providers and their web links. Their web sites are full of print and other materials designed to enhance your experience of these programs.
alexandra m. pickett

The Digital Citizen - My Sojourn in the World of Web 2.0 by Irene Watts-Politza - 0 views

  • Aug 04 2012
  • Reflecting on the online course design process, I realize I have made a tremendous transition from first-time student to instructor in the space of one semester. What I have learned about myself is that I have an affinity for designing in the online environment. 
  • I just finished what may be my last discussion post for ETAP640. As I went through the post process, I was cognizant of each step: read your classmates’ posts; respond to something that resonates within you; teach (us) something by locating and sharing resources that support your thinking;  include the thinking and experiences of classmates; offer your opinion on what you are sharing; cite your resources for the benefit of all; tag your resources logically.
  • ...20 more annotations...
  • I am technology-proficient.
  • blog posts are personalized records of learning, thinking, and being. 
  • students’ learning is demonstrated through the vehicle of discussion.  
  • While I am not yet a full technophile, I am surely no longer a technophobe!
  • discussion is the heart of online learning. 
  •   I so deeply enjoyed the reading and studying portion of this course … it opened a new world of theory to me, made more exciting by the historic proximity of the leading researchers in the field. 
  • It is not about what the instructor wants to hear, it is about hearing the student’s articulation of what is being learned that is essential to evaluating the content of a blog post.
  • (Think Twitter, Irene!) 
  • I have spent my academic life I believing that I have to ‘go it alone’, since I walked home from school alone the first day of first grade.  Strangely, this course, in which I spend so much time alone, is teaching me that I don’t. 
  • Through trying to be “fearless” about using technology, as Alex advises, I have come to learn that confidence is something that one must exercise in all spheres of the online environment.
  • The resulting ah ha moments became the core of my entry …
  • It causes me to reflect on the similarities between online and physical communities, something I had not thought of before.  Could it be that we really are, slowly and steadily, growing into a genuine community?
  • we can not help but to teach when we learn and to learn when we teach.
  • I kept telling myself, “You need the experience if you want to be an instructional designer!”
  • I am a student whose understanding of connectivism and heutagogy is being developed experientially through taking this course.
  • Teaching presence also involves anticipating students’ needs based on monitoring progress and being ready to find that perfect something to support the student’s learning.
  • I realized that the online environment is actually a type of classroom; is that why course language includes such terms as “area”, and “room”?
  • “As iron sharpens iron, so a friend sharpens a friend.” This is certainly true of discussion forum.  We learn with and for each other: as  you learn, I learn. 
  • So, reflection has proven its worth yet again:  reflecting on my work in designing EED406 thus far is proof that research-based best practice works.
  • complaints, above, I think about the layout of the course; if it’s too many clicks away or the explanations aren’t clear, students become anxious, lose interest, and possibly
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    Student Reflections @wattspoi on "Heutagogy & its Implications for Evaluative Feedback" http://t.co/xiuWsCsD #lrnchat #edchat
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