Standards of Good Practice For Teaching Online - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Standards of Good Practice For Teaching Online

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to be a really successful, dynamic, and creative online instructor ... chats. Students exchange phone numbers and email addresses. 3. Encourage active learning ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Standards of Good Practice For Teaching Online


1
Standards of Good Practice For Teaching Online
  • Christina Sax
  • University of Maryland University College


2
Instructional Models
  • Transmission of information
  • traditional view of education
  • classroom based education
  • Mentoring of students
  • Creation of a learning community

3
What should I do . . .
  • to insure student learning success . . .
  • to make the process go smoothly . . .
  • to manage the class effectively . . .

in the absence of face-to-face contact with
students?
4
What should I do . . .
to be a really successful, dynamic, and
creative online instructor and inspire my
students without spending all my time online
and without losing my sanity in the process?
5
More Questions ...
  • How much time should I expect to spend online?
  • How often should faculty members communicate with
    students?
  • How quickly should faculty members respond to
    student questions/work?

6
And More Questions . . .
  • How often should students interact with
    instructor and/or each other?
  • How much time should students spend on course
    work?
  • What kinds of activities should students engage
    in?

7
And Still More Questions ?
8
Seven Principles of Good Practice
Chickering Gamson June 1987 7 Principles for
Good Practice in Undergraduate Education
9
The Seven Principles
  • 1. Encourage student-faculty contact and
  • interaction
  • 2. Encourage cooperation among students
  • 3. Encourage active learning
  • 4. Give prompt feedback

10
The Seven Principles
  • 5. Emphasize time on task
  • 6. Communicate high expectations
  • 7. Respect diverse talents and ways of
  • learning

11
Two Additional Principles
8. Let students know what to expect - from
you and in the course 9. Make effective use of
the technology
12
How to do I Put Best Practices into Action?
13
1. Encourage student-faculty contact
  • Use e-mail for announcements, news, updates,
    reminders, etc.
  • Encourage student questions, inquiries, feedback,
    input
  • Refer to students by name
  • Hold virtual office hours
  • Instructor input into discussions

14
2. Encourage cooperation among students
  • Activities that promote cooperation
  • team learning
  • asynchronous problem solving
  • group projects, presentations, debates
  • peer reviews
  • chats
  • Students exchange phone numbers and email
    addresses

15
3. Encourage active learning
  • Learning is not a spectator sport
  • Pose questions that foster thinking and problem
    solving
  • Interrupted Discussion method
  • Each one teach one

16
3. Encourage active learning
  • Students provide and critique URLs
  • Students design/create Web pages
  • Students develop knowledge artifacts and concept
    maps
  • Encourage opinions as well as facts

17
4. Give prompt feedback
  • Hold virtual office hours
  • Return graded work in one week
  • Post grades regularly
  • Acknowledge all student questions

18
5. Emphasize time on task
  • Let student know time-on-task is important to
    success
  • Award points for all work
  • Require discussion participation
  • Provide specific learning objectives for each
    unit
  • Use assignments that allow students to apply
    learning

19
6. Communicate high expectations
  • Course goals and objectives in Syllabus
  • Post examples of excellent, average, and poor
    work
  • Model through example

20
6. Communicate high expectations
  • Make your expectations of students clear with
    respect to
  • facts, concepts, critical thinking, analysis,
    writing, format, quantitative reasoning, internet
    usage, frequency of check-ins, frequency of
    interaction

21
7. Respect diverse talents and ways of
learning
  • Recognize that online classes are not the
    preferred environment for some
  • Allow options for demonstrating student
    achievement
  • Recognize, respect and reward creativity

22
7. Respect diverse talents and ways of
learning
  • Be sensitive to possible cultural differences
  • Understand and appreciate the distant learners
    lifestyle

23
8. Let students know what to expect - from
the instructor
  • Response time from instructor
  • Lecture, support, mentor, facilitator?
  • What replaces seat time/contact hours of the
    face-to-face class?

24
8. Let students know what to expect - in the
course
  • Total amount of time per week
  • Interactive vs. independent
  • Rigor
  • Schedule and due dates

25
9. Make effective use of technology
  • Does your discipline have specific requirements?
  • What technologies/materials are available in your
    discipline?
  • What technology/materials are available to your
    students?

26
9. Make effective use of the technology
  • Is it an effective means of content delivery and
    instruction?
  • Where are your students located?

27
Is Online Teaching Really That Different?
  • student-faculty interaction
  • student-student cooperation
  • active learning
  • prompt feedback
  • time on task
  • high expectations
  • diversity
  • communication
  • effective use of materials

28
Future Questions, Comments, Suggestions, Ideas .
Chris Sax UMUC 301-985-7625 csax_at_umuc.edu

Teaching Science Online Discussion Group -
www.mdfaconline.org/ mdfaconline/facfellows.html
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