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Understanding Interactive Elements in Distance Learning Courses

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Center for Distance and Independent Study. University of Missouri Columbia ... Fox, Samantha, and Mary Madden. ( December 2005) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Understanding Interactive Elements in Distance Learning Courses


1
Understanding Interactive Elements in Distance
Learning Courses
  • Laura Foley and Matt MillerCenter for Distance
    and Independent StudyUniversity of
    MissouriColumbia

2
Understanding Interactive Elements Presentation
Overview (objectives)
  • During this presentation, we will
  • Define interactivity, and explain why it matters.
  • Identify ways to integrate interactivity into
    course content.
  • Explain and illustrate our working set of design
    principles for interactive components.
  • Discuss how to use a team approach in developing
    interactive elements for online courses.

3
Understanding Interactive Elements Presentation
Overview (presenters)
  • Meet your presenters
  • Laura FoleySenior Instructional EditorCenter
    for Distance and Independent StudyUniversity of
    MissouriColumbiafoleyl_at_missouri.edu
  • Matt MillerInstructional Design
    SpecialistCenter for Distance and Independent
    StudyUniversity of MissouriColumbiamillermatt_at_m
    issouri.edu

4
Understanding Interactive Elements
  • What Is Interactivity?

5
Understanding Interactive Elements What Is
Interactivity?
  • General (dictionary) definitionMutually or
    reciprocally active involving the actions or
    input of a user, especially of, relating to, or
    being a two-way electronic communication
    system.
  • Steuer (1992)Interactivity is the extent to
    which users can participate in modifying the form
    and content of a mediated environment in real
    time.

6
Understanding Interactive Elements What Is
Interactivity? (Moore)
  • Moore (1989) identified three types of
    interaction that occur in learning
  • between the learner and the instructor
  • between the learner and other learners
  • between the learner and the content to be learned
  • Lack of learner-instructor and learner-learner
    interaction leads to emphasis on learner-content
    interaction

7
Understanding Interactive Elements What Is
Interactivity? (interface)
  • Online presentation introduces a fourth type of
    interactionbetween the learner and the learning
    interface.
  • The students ability to use the interactive
    technologies successfully is a predictor of
    satisfaction and success. (Hillman, Willis, and
    Gunawardena, 1994) (Lohr, 2000) (Thurmond and
    Wambach, 2004)

8
Understanding Interactive Elements What Is
Interactivity? (our definition)
  • Must define a threshold for interaction on Web
    interfaces (constantly changing)
  • A working definitionLearner-content
    interaction modifies the environment in which
    students normally interact with written or visual
    material, and it does so in a way that either
    reinforces the objectives in a given lesson
    (through repetition or reiteration) or asks
    students to somehow work with their knowledge
    about the content (through application, analysis,
    synthesis, etc.).
  • Case Study (Ask the Expert) Demo gtgt

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12
Understanding Interactive Elements What Is
Interactivity? (impact)
  • Increased interaction in distance courses is
    associated with higher achievement and student
    satisfaction (Roblyer and Wiencke, 2003)
  • Complements different learning styles (e.g.,
    aural or kinesthetic)
  • Can promote higher-order thinking
  • Provides online adaptations of activities that
    occur in face-to-face classrooms
  • Engages student interest in material

13
Understanding Interactive Elements
  • Ways to Incorporate Interactivity

14
Understanding Interactive Elements Incorporating
Interactivity
  • Taxonomy of online interactive environments
  • texts that ask students to do something
    (illocutionary force) (see J.L. Austin)
  • self-checking review questions (can be simple
    HTML, driven by XML, or linear with Flash and
    media)
  • graphical organizers that allow students to
    discover content
  • integrated approach in which the environment (the
    Web page) allows students to discover content
    within a single interface
  • guided, asynchronous conversations that ask
    students to shape their intellectual inquiries
    (blogs, discussion boards, wikis)
  • live video/chat (mediated social interaction)
  • simulacrum (Second Life, etc.)

15
Understanding Interactive Elements Self-checking
Review Activities
  • Ideal for reviewing vocabulary, key terms,
    etc.questions that require objective, concrete
    answers
  • Can be designed using Flash or XML-driven data
  • Best when used in the context of the lesson
  • reinforcement (at the knowledge and comprehension
    levels) is most effective immediately after
    concepts are presented
  • XML-driven review Demo gtgt
  • Flash-based review Demo gtgt

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17
Understanding Interactive Elements Graphical
Organizers
  • Online application of classroom activity that
    helps students organize abstract concepts or
    brainstorm ideas
  • Can be designed in Flash or in HTML (using tables
    with form fields)
  • Flash graphical organizer Demo gtgt
  • HTML table with form fields Demo gtgt

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19
Understanding Interactive Elements Dynamic Media
and Animation
  • Dynamic media can be used for information that
    does not have to be presented in a linear fashion
  • Image slideshow
  • Tooltips
  • Image slideshow Demo gtgt
  • Animation can be used to demonstrate a process or
    conceptFlash animation Demo gtgt

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23
Understanding Interactive Elements New Web
Technologies
  • In particular, technologies that allow for more
    dynamic online collaboration
  • Weblogs (blogs)
  • Wikis
  • Podcasts or iPod-compatible activities
  • Few are talking about the use of these
    technologies in independent study, but why should
    we consider their use?

24
Understanding Interactive Elements Blogs in
Independent Study
  • How would we use them?
  • Not the same as personal blogging
  • Online adaptation of traditional classroom
    activities such as journaling, response papers,
    and preparation for research
  • Advantages
  • practice/improve writing skills, emphasizes
    process, uses medium of Web (links, citations,
    graphics), functions as a portfolio and record of
    students intellectual development
  • Disadvantages
  • may encourage sloppy writing habits that could
    spill into other assignments, privacy measures
    should be taken, not suitable for all content
    areas

25
Understanding Interactive Elements Wikis in
Independent Study
  • Whats a wiki?
  • A Web application that allows users to create,
    remove, and edit information
  • How are wikis used in education?
  • Students can critique, edit, or contribute
    entries to existing wikis.
  • The course instructor can start a wiki that all
    students can contribute to.
  • Social Justice Wiki, Columbia University Demo gtgt

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27
Understanding Interactive Elements Packaged
Audio
  • Audio that you intend students to listen to and
    work with outside a browser

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29
Understanding Interactive Elements
  • Principles of Designing
  • Interactive Components

30
Understanding Interactive Elements Principles
of Designing Interactive Elements
  • Establish clear learning goals, matched to
    learning objectives
  • Type of activity chosen should complement content
    to be learned
  • Interactivity must serve a purposenot
    technology for technologys sake
  • Include clear, concise instructions
  • Maintain learner orientation through use of
    visual cues
  • Logical links, buttons, and menu items
  • Consistent formatting and use of color
  • No unnecessary graphics or content

31
Understanding Interactive Elements Principles
of Designing Interactive Elements
  • Developing a plan
  • Questions
  • Keyed responses and distractors (for objective
    questions)
  • Sample answers (for open-ended questions)
  • Any other feedback
  • Vocabulary terms, definitions, etc.
  • Multimedia graphics, audio files, etc.
  • Design layout, navigation, fonts, colors

32
Understanding Interactive Elements
  • A Team Approach
  • to Interactivity

33
Understanding Interactive Elements A Team
Approach to Interactivity
  • Author/Instructor
  • Provides content knowledge
  • Curriculum Coordinator and/or Instructional
    Designer
  • Works with instructor to present content for
    online delivery
  • Provides orientation and ongoing guidance in
    incorporating technology
  • Multimedia Specialist and/or Editor
  • Produces interactive components (under guidance
    of instructional designer)
  • Helps to fine-tune delivery of course content

34
Understanding Interactive Elements
  • References

35
Understanding Interactive ElementsReferences
  • Campbell, Gardner. (November/December 2005).
    Theres Something in the Air Podcasting in
    Education. EDUCAUSE Review, 40(6).
    http//www.educause.edu/apps/er/erm05/erm0561.asp.
  • Downes, Stephen. (September/October 2004).
    Educational Blogging. EDUCAUSE Review, 39(5).
    http//www.educause.edu/pub/er/erm04/erm0450.asp.
  • Fountain, Renée. (no date). Wiki Pedagogy.
    Dossiers technopédagogiques. http//www.profetic.o
    rg16080/dossiers/dossier_imprimer.php3?id_rubriqu
    e110.
  • Fox, Samantha, and Mary Madden. (December 2005).
    Generations Online Pew Internet and American
    Life Project. http//www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_
    Generations_Memo.pdf.

36
Understanding Interactive ElementsReferences
(cont.)
  • Glogoff, Stuart. (June/July 2005). Instructional
    Blogging Promoting Interactivity,
    Student-Centered Learning, and Peer Input.
    Innovate Journal of Online Education 1(5).
    http//www.innovateonline.info/index.php?viewarti
    cleid126. Liu, Alan. (2006). Developing a
    Wikipedia Research Policy. Reprinted on
    Kairosnews.org, http//kairosnews.org/developing-a
    -wikipedia-research-policy.
  • Lohr, L.L. (2000). Designing the Instructional
    Interface. Computers in Human Behavior 16(2).
  • Moore, Michael. (1989). Three Types of
    Interaction. American Journal of Distance
    Education 3(2).
  • Roblyer, M.D., and W.R. Wiencke. Design and Use
    of a Rubric to Assess and Encourage Interactive
    Qualities in Distance Courses. The American
    Journal of Distance Education 17(2).
  • Steuer, Jonathan. (1992). Defining Virtual
    Reality Dimensions Determining Telepresence.
    Journal of Communication 42(4).

37
Understanding Interactive ElementsReferences
(cont.)
  • Thurmond, Veronica, and Karen Wambach. Towards
    an Understanding of Interactions in Distance
    Education. Online Journal of Nursing Informatics
    8(2).
  • Trimarco, Ruth. (2004). Use of blogs in online
    college classes. In B. Hoffman (Ed.),
    Encyclopedia of Educational Technology.
    http//coe.sdsu.edu/eet/Articles/blogonlineclass/i
    ndex.htm.
  • Wagner, Ellen D. (1997). Interactivity From
    Agents to Outcomes. New Directions for Teaching
    and Learning (71)
  • Young, Jeffrey R. (11 October 2006). Textbook
    Company Tries Putting Bonus Materials on iTunes.
    The Chronicle Wired Campus Blog.
    http//chronicle.com/wiredcampus/article/1628/text
    book-company-tries-putting-bonus-materials-on-itun
    es.
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