Search
There are 4 results.
Tag
Tag
All (20)
Analytics (1)
Annotated Bibliography (1)
Assessments (2)
Asynchrony (2)
Backwards Design (1)
Canvas (1)
Collaboration (3)
Communication (4)
Community (2)
Competency-Based Education (1)
Content Creation (1)
Copyright (1)
Course Maintenance (2)
Course Preparation (4)
Discussions (1)
Faculty Presence (1)
Faculty Support (2)
Feedback (1)
Learning Objectives (2)
Multimodality (3)
Qualitative courses (1)
Quantitative courses (1)
Revision (1)
Synchrony (3)
Third-Party Tools (1)
Emergency Course Build Checklist: A Response to COVID-19
Your class was never intended to be online. It was delivered face-to- face to a live audience. Perhaps it followed that same structure for years. Now, with little warning, it’s an online class. Where do you start? What do you prioritize? And what is essential to create a meaningfully engaging learning experience online? Rapidly transitioning a course to online doesn’t require recreating every element of the face-to-face version.
Five Ways to Succeed as an Online Instructor
Whether experienced in or new to online teaching, following these tips on online instruction can make the process more intuitive. The online environment may seem vastly different from the classroom, but these tips will make it feel natural, allowing you to improve student experience, increase teaching efficacy, cultivate engagement, and ensure successful course management.
Easy and Essential Online Course Elements
Transferring your course online opens a world of possibilities. In fact, you might be tempted to spend hours trying to locate and learn new educational technologies, or to rebuild your entire course in the learning management system (LMS). But while effective use of technology can certainly enhance learning experiences, it can also introduce obstacles for both faculty and students.
Administrator Needs: Standardizing Elements of a Digital Learning Program
As an administrator or department chair, you are in a unique position to shape an online program and establish programmatic requirements or recommendations. This is because you have been tasked with taking a broader view of the program, focusing not only on individual course development (as a faculty member might) but also on how an array of courses must be cohesively united to achieve certain goals, values, and accreditation standards. To that end, this piece focuses on why consistency across a program is integral to program quality and student success, and therefore why it falls within your purview to consider standardizing certain elements, requirements, and design choices across all courses in a program.