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Quality Matters: Peer Review of Online Courses

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Implementing the Quality Matters Model to Improve Online Courses ... Blueprint for improvement. Your Point of View as a. QM Peer Course Reviewer ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quality Matters: Peer Review of Online Courses


1
Implementing the Quality Matters Model to Improve
Online Coursesed bowen, Executive Dean Distance
Learning, Dallas TeleCollege
2
Master Online Teacher Competencies Vrgil E.
Varvel Jr.University of Illinois
  • Administrative Roles (Systems, Ethical and
    Legal Issues)
  • Personal Roles (Personal Qualities and
    Characteristics)
  • Technological Roles (Technology Knowledge and
    Abilities)
  • Instructional Design Roles (Instructional
    Design Processes, Knowledge, and Abilities)
  • Pedagogical Roles (Teaching Processes,
    Knowledge, and Abilities)
  • Assessment Roles (Assessing Student Learning
    and Abilities)
  • Social Processes and Presence (Social Roles)

3
Warming Up
  • Who are we?
  • What are your expectations?
  • Do we agree . . . .

4
  • Goals for Our Session
  • Examine the environment
  • Describe essential components
  • Apply the QM standards
  • Look at adoption strategies

5
What has been the Impact of DL at your
institution?
6
What has been your Institutions response?
7
What is quality?
8
Components of the Online Environment
Assessment Access Points
Quality Matters
LMS
ONLINE ENVIRONMENT
9
What are the components of QM?
10
Quality Matters Peer Course Review Process
Faculty Course Developers
Institutions
National Standards Research Literature
Course
Rubric
Faculty Reviewers
Training
Peer Course Review
Feedback
Blueprint for improvement
Instructional Designers
11
Your Point of View as a QM Peer Course Reviewer
  • Take the students point of view
  • Advocate for the student
  • If you cant find evidence that the standard is
    met, dont assume it is or isnt there.. ask the
    faculty member.

12
Within Your Group
  • What does it mean to take the students point of
    view?
  • Is this possible?
  • Are there times when this might not be the best
    strategy?

13
For Our Purposes, Quality Is
85
  • More than average more than good enough
  • An attempt to capture whats expected in an
    effective online course at about an 85 level
  • Based on research and widely accepted standards

14
The Rubric
  • Eight general standards
  • Course Overview and Introduction
  • Learning Objectives
  • Assessment and Measurement
  • Resources and Materials
  • Learner Interaction
  • Course Technology
  • Learner Support
  • Accessibility

Key components must align.
15
What is Alignment?
  • Critical course elements work together to ensure
    that students achieve the desired learning
    outcomes.

16
Key Standards That Must Align
  • Objectives
  • Standard II.1 Measurable outcomes
  • Standard II.2 Content mastery, critical
    thinking, learning skills addressed.
  • Assessment and Measurement
  • Standard III.1 Measures objectives consistent
    with learning activities
  • Learner Interactions and Activities
  • Standard V.1 Help students achieve the
    objectives
  • Course Materials
  • Standard IV.1 Deep and comprehensive enough for
    students to achieve the objective
  • Course Technology
  • Standard VI.1 Tools and media support the
    objectives

17
(No Transcript)
18
General Standard ICourse Overview and
Introduction
  • 1.1 Navigational instructions make the
  • organization of the course easy to
  • understand.
  • 1.2 A statement introduces the student to the
  • course and to the structure of the student
  • learning, and, in the case of a hybrid
  • course, clarifies the relationship between
  • the face-to-face and online components.

19
General Standard IILearning Objectives
(Competencies)
  • II.I The course learning objectives
  • describe outcomes that are
  • measurable.
  • II.2 The module/unit learning objectives
  • describe outcomes that are measurable and
    consistent with the
  • course-level objectives.

20
General Standard III Assessment and Measurement
  • III.1 The types of assessments selected
  • measure the stated learning objectives
  • and are consistent with course activities
  • and resources.
  • III.2 The course grading policy is stated
    clearly.
  • III.3 Specific and descriptive criteria are
  • provided for the evaluation of students
  • work and participation.

21
General Standard IV Resources and Materials
  • IV.I The instructional materials support
  • the stated learning objectives.
  • IV.2 The instructional materials have
  • sufficient breadth, depth,
  • currency for the student to learn the
  • subject.

22
General Standard VLearner Interaction
  • V.1 The learning activities promote the
  • achievement of stated learning objectives.
  • V.2 Learning activities foster
  • instructor-student, content-student, and if
    appropriate to this course, student-student
  • interaction.
  • V.3 Clear standards are set for instructor
    response and availability (turn-around time
    for email, grade posting, etc.)

23
General Standard VICourse Technology
  • VI.I The tools and media support the
  • learning objectives and are
  • appropriately chosen to deliver the
  • content of the course.

24
General Standard VII Learner Support
  • No 3-point elementsThis standard has no
    essential 3-point elements because its
    primarily concerned with academic support
    services, student support services and technical
    support services.usually thought to be the
    primary responsibility of the institution and not
    the individual instructor.

25
General Standard VIIIAccessibility
  • VIII.1 The course acknowledges the importance of
  • ADA requirements.
  • To meet this standard, the course must include
    BOTH
  • of these elements
  • The course must be offered using software that is
    accepted as ADA compliant..
  • AND
  • The course should include a brief statement that
    clearly tells students how to access ADA services
    at the institution.

26
Adoption Strategies
27
Whats In It For Institutions
  • External validation
  • Strengthen accreditation package
  • Raise QA as a priority activity
  • Access to a sustainable, replicable, scalable QA
    process
  • Inform online course training practices
  • Provide professional development activities

28
Whats In It For Faculty
  • Improve online courses
  • External quality assurance
  • Expand professional community
  • Review other courses and gain new ideas for own
    course
  • Participation useful for professional development
    plan and portfolio
  • Receive 150 for each completed peer course review

29
How could you use QM?
30
Where are some of the decision points?
31
Range of Implementation Options
Formal QM Peer Review
Internal QM Peer Review
Internal Review
Dean Review
Colleague Review
Cost
Self Administered
32
Multiple Uses of QM
  • Guidelines for initial online course development
  • Quality assurance of existing courses
  • Ongoing faculty professional development
  • Institutional reaccredidation packages
  • Formation of distance learning policies
    steering committees
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