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Using Virtual Mentoring

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Using Virtual Mentoring & Online Resources for Adjunct Training and Support Philip Pecorino Professor, CUNY Online Baccalaureate & Queensborough Community College – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Using Virtual Mentoring


1
Using Virtual Mentoring Online Resources for
Adjunct Training and Support
  • Philip Pecorino
  • Professor, CUNY Online Baccalaureate
    Queensborough Community College
  • Ellen Smiley
  • Academic Director, CUNY Online Baccalaureate
    Associate Professor,
  • The City College
  • Wendy Williams,
  • Instructor, CUNY Online Baccalaureate
  • Tina Meyerhoff,
  • Instructor, CUNY Online Baccalaureate

2
Opportunities Challenges
  • Adjuncts have extraordinarily important roles in
    the delivery of undergraduate courses at CUNY
  • Their adequate training and supervision are major
    challenges
  • Adjuncts teaching at more than one institution
    with busy schedules make organizing face-to-face
    training difficult.

3
Introduction to the CUNY Online Baccalaureate
  • Began enrolling students in Fall 2006
  • Program for college leavers
  • One interdisciplinary major second added January
    2008
  • 700 students
  • Demographic profile similar to that at other CUNY
    schools, except students are older (50 30-44
    yrs. old)

4
Introduction to the CUNY Online Baccalaureate
  • No fulltime faculty 100 adjunct teaching staff
  • Instructors are drawn from across the NYC area as
    well as from out-of-town locations
  • At least 5-10 new instructors added each semester
  • Many new instructors have limited online teaching
    experience

5
Basic Goals of Faculty Development
  • Produce a community of learners and teachers in
    which continual improvement is a shared value. 
  • Create a community ethos incorporating a
    dedication to furthering pedagogy and assisting
    colleagues in the perfection of our craft. 
  • Faculty who understand that we can teach and
    learn from one another. 
  • All members of the community participate in the
    sharing of knowledge and in the success of their
    colleagues and students. 

6
Challenges of Training Supervision
  • Ensuring instructors highly skilled in teaching
    in the online environment
  • Creating a sense of community commitment among
    instructors who rarely if ever see one another

7
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9
CUE Innovation Grant 2009
Building Better Courses Training Mentoring
Adjunct Instructors Online
10
Florida Community College at Jacksonville Model
  • Orientation training program
  • Structure of faculty mentors for new instructors,
    including
  • Virtual Mentors
  • Lead Mentors
  • Faculty Coordinator

11
Elements of the Faculty Development Program
12
Elements of the Faculty Development Program
INTRODUCTION  to teach, to teach well, and to
teach even better -the resolve of professional
educators
13
Elements of the Faculty Development Program
Program Goal Basic Characteristics for an
Effective Faculty Development Program 1) TRAINING
Sessions and Workshops on pedagogy and on the
Hardware and Software  2) ANNOUNCEMENTS and
COMMUNICATIONS  3) WEBSITE in CUNY Academic
Commons for Faculty Development  4)
NEWSLETTER at least once/semester  5) TEACHING
HANDBOOK-distributed and located online  6)
INFORMATION on ALTERNATIVES to BB (as backup) in
the event of loss of access to BB  7) FACULTY
DEVELOPMENT DAYS- at least once/semester  8) 
MENTOR PROGRAM 9) ASSESSMENT
14
Elements of the Faculty Development Program
Program Goal The goal of the Faculty
Development effort is to produce a community of
learners and teachers in which the continual
improvement of the effectiveness of instruction
is a shared value.  The effort is to produce a
community ethos incorporating a dedication to
furthering pedagogy and assisting colleagues in
the perfection of our craft. As instructors come
to see what they do with their students as
involving both the teaching and the learning so
too faculty in these programs should understand
that we can teach and learn from one another. 
The Faculty Development Program is offered to
facilitate that teaching and learning.  All
members of the community are encouraged and
expected to participate in the sharing of
knowledge and in the success of their colleagues
and students. 
15
Elements of the Faculty Development Program
Basic Characteristics for an Effective Faculty
Development Program  To insure an effective
faculty development program that supports the
development of effective online instruction
there are several important elements that must be
present.  The program needs to insure that all
faculty will eventually produce courses that meet
the standards of the program and then continue
to revise them in an effort to improve on the
efficacy of instruction.  In other words and the
basic point is that there needs to be a
continuous quality improvement process.   The
program should make use of national standards of
best practice, the research literature, and
instructional design principles.     Student
learning should be the central focus of the
faculty development program and all
instruction. The expectations for faculty and for
students are set clearly and set above the merely
satisfactory.  Continual improvement is the
standard and not perfection. The faculty
development program and its elements are to be
faculty driven and subject to the review of
faculty participants in an effort to continually
improve upon the program as do faculty improve
upon their instruction.  The faculty development
program employs observations and collegial
assessments that are intended to assist the
continual improvement of instruction and so they
are not designed to be judgmental.   Assessments
of the instructional designs and course content
and course management are not to be based on the
personal preferences of mentors but on the
evidence found in the course and the standards
of the program.  Mentors and observers working
with faculty understand that the standards and
criteria for observations are to be used in a
manner that is not prescriptive understanding
that there are many ways for a standard to be
met. 
16
1. Training Sessions Workshops
  • Sessions and Workshops on pedagogy and on the
    Hardware and Software 
  • Several times throughout the year face to face
    workshops may be offered as well as one on one
    meetings of faculty with the
  • support staff to receive instruction or to
    practice with the hardware and software available
    to faculty in the program.
  • These meetings are supplemental to the
    information that will be available to faculty be
    means of website resources, most
  • likely located in the CUNY Academic Commons. 
  • Pedagogy, Instructional Design and Class
    Management will be distinguished from sessions
    and resources that deal with the
  • hardware and software. 
  • There will be a mandatory participation in a
    full-day orientation and training program that
    will
  • (1) give prospective instructors a working
    familiarity with the standards for online
    pedagogy that are expected in all courses and
  • (2) provide hands-on, computer-based experience
    with the course management system (Blackboard) as
    well as specialized software tools available to
    all instructors, our e-portfolio system, and
    assessment tools.  A library of online podcasts
    is under development, with modules focused on
    each of the skills covered in training.
  • These are not designed to substitute for
    face-to-face training, that serves an important
    community-building function, but to function as
    reminders of key elements. 

17
2. Announcements Communications
  • Be means of distribution lists and postings in
    the CUNY Academic Commons all faculty will be
    kept current on developments and resources. 
    Issues of pedagogy and mechanics can be raised
    and the community can respond with best practices
    and possible solutions.

18
3. Website in CUNY Academic Commons
  • The new CUNY resource will be utilized to archive
    and make accessible the resources developed by
    the faculty of the CUNY Online BA/BS Programs.
  • It is possible that there will be separate areas
    for the Consortial Faculty and another for all
    faculty.  Some areas will be open to the public
    and others
  • open only to members of the group. Once faculty
    are entered into the Commons they may participate
    in and contribute to the other resources and
    group discussions found there.
  • Initial Draft of the site to be developed and
    relocated
  • http//www.qcc.cuny.edu/SocialSciences/ppecorino/C
    UNY-OLBA-BS-Fac-Dev-Program.html

19
4. Newsletter
  • Distributed by email to all faculty and archived
    at the Academic Commons
  • Focus is on development. 
  • Possible features include
  • QA,
  • Did you know,
  • Latest developments,
  • hardware and software availability notices 

20
5. Teaching Handbook
  • As written materials related to the program and
    to effective teaching practices are produced they
  • will be gathered and arranged into a handbook
    that will be disseminated to all faculty ,
  • particularly to new faculty,  and located on the
    website. 

21
6. Course Development Days
  • The current practice of a faculty development day
    each semester
  • continue. 
  • New features will include
  • the written expectation that new faculty are
    expected to attend
  • mentors will identify what they think are best
    practices whose
  • practitioners will be invited to present them
  • scheduling at least 3 weeks before the start of
    the Fall and Spring
  • semesters
  • reports on what the post semester course
    assessments have disclosed as needing attention
    as commendable or remediable
  • reports on the student post semester assessments
  • reports from the academic directors and faculty
    development
  • coordinator
  • student panel

22
7. Virtual Mentor Program
  • In Fall of 2009 there were Virtual Mentors
    appointed, each having one to three new faculty
    to mentor. 
  • In time Consortial Faculty will serve as Lead
    Mentors who will oversee several Virtual Mentors
    who will assist from one to five new adjuncts.
  • There are stipends for this work. There is a
    Lead Mentor for the first cohort of four Virtual
    Mentors.
  • There will be a coordinator of the Lead Mentors. 
  • By 2011 all faculty will serve or be served by
    the mentoring.  Adjuncts with fewer than four
    semesters of teaching online will be mentored.
  • Faculty with more than three semesters may be
    called upon to be Virtual Mentors. 
  • From the ranks of the Consortial Faculty who
    have been Virtual Mentors will come the Lead
    Mentors.  
  • There will be the one coordinator of faculty
    development who will oversee the Lead Mentors. 
  • ALL FACULTY ARE INVOLVED
  • Consortial Faculty provide the Lead Mentors
  • Experienced Faculty (more  than three semesters
    online) may serve as Virtual Mentors
  • New Faculty (less than four semesters online)
    will be mentored

23
7. Virtual Mentor Program
  •  Lead Mentors
  • These are members of the Online Baccalaureate
    Consortial Faculty for each concentration, most
    of whom have served in teaching and
    administrative roles in the program for 18 months
    or more, will coordinate the work of the Virtual
    Mentors 
  • Responsibilities 
  • 1) Work with Faculty Development Coordinator in
    support of faculty development
  • 2) Organize and chair meetings of their assigned
    Virtual Mentors, either in person or using
    online conferencing capabilities (such as
    Go-To-Meeting) and oversee the activities of
    their Virtual Mentors
  • 3) Organize all components of the mandated
    course/teaching observations
  • 4) Assist with the planning of Faculty
    Development Day
  • 5) Participate in the Faculty Development
    Resource Site in the CUNY Academic Commons
  • 6) Make recommendations to the Academic Directors
    and Associate Deans with regard to
  • relative success of training and teaching and
    needed modifications in processes, including
    assessment
  • 7) Orient and train new Virtual Mentors,
    developing their capacity to interact with new
    adjuncts in a positive and supportive way, in
    part by modeling this style
  • 8) Collaborate with assessment staff in the
    collection and analysis of data about the virtual
    mentoring program. 

24
7. Virtual Mentor Program
  • Virtual Mentors
  • These are experienced, successful instructors in
    the Online program, who receive specialized
    training and
  • a stipend for actively mentoring up to five new
    online adjuncts each semester.   
  • Responsibilities
  • 1) Develop positive professional relationships
    with new adjuncts and provide assistance,
    suggestions,
  • ideas and regular feedback on course web site
    structure and teaching practices
  • 2)  Meet those whom they mentor at Initial
    Orientation and Training Day
  • 3) Be available as a resource and as support for
    those that they mentor
  • 4) Serve as a liaison between each adjunct and
    the program administration
  • 5) Work with adjuncts as they build their sites
    and teach their first or second semester
  • 6) Conduct early informal observation (in first
    three weeks) to assist faculty member
  • 7) Conduct required course/teaching observations
    once each term
  • 8) Conduct post semester follow up assessment
    including review of
  • faculty member's self assessment
  • student assessment of the course for the faculty
    member as invited by the faculty member
  • formal student assessment of the course submitted
    for the program

25
7. Virtual Mentor Program
  •  New Faculty 
  • Responsibilities 
  • 1)       Participate in Orientation and Training
  • 2)       Work with Mentor in the
    development/revision  of the class site
  • 3)       Work with Mentor throughout the first
    semester(s) on class design and management
  • 4)       Work with Mentor on course assessment
  • 5)       Cooperate with Formal Observation
  • 6)       Conduct an assessment of your course-
    self assessment and student assessment
  • 7)      Make revisions in instructional design
    and course management techniques as result of
    assessments

26
7. Virtual Mentor Program
  •  ASSESSMENT 
  • For improving the quality of instruction,
    especially in general education courses 
  • 1) Improve the ratings of specific dimensions of
    teaching and course design, assessed using the
    rating scale
  • developed during the 2008-09 academic year and
    used in course observations
  • Data Collection  Analysis of formal written
    teaching observation reports for all instructors 
  • 2) Achieve more positive student ratings of their
    courses, measured by the evaluation survey
    distributed each term
  • Data Collection Ratings of students on twenty
    different measures of their course and program
    experience (each
  • term) comparison of ratings from baseline period
    and after implementation of proposed activities 
  • 3) Achieve positive reports by adjunct
    instructors and their mentors concerning the
    guided teaching experience
  • Data Collection All new adjuncts, along with
    Virtual and Lead Mentors will complete written
    questionnaires that
  • include both open-ended and rating questions all
    mentors will maintain logs of their interactions
    with new
  • adjuncts 
  • 4) Increase positive self-reports by adjunct
    instructors concerning their online teaching
    experience and
  • their sense of attachment and commitment to the
    online program.

27
The Mentor Experience
  • Wendy Williams, Instructor, Online Baccalaureate
  • Virtual Mentor 

28
Flurry of emails to set up an online chat
29
Using Wimba Pronto for Virtual Mentoring
30
  • Two instructors in virtual mentor chat on Pronto

31
  • Only two at a time on screen in four-way mentor
    chat on Pronto

32
  • Sharing goes both ways in virtual mentor
    relationship

33
The Experience of Being Mentored
  • Tina Meyerhoff,
  • New Instructor,
  • Online Baccalaureate

34
Contact Information Philip Pecorino, Professor,
Online Baccalaureate (SPS) Queensborough
Community College ppecorino_at_qcc.cuny.edu Ellen
Smiley, Academic Director, Online Baccalaureate
Associate Professor, City Collegeesmiley_at_ccny.cun
y.edu Wendy Williams, Instructor, Online
Baccalaureate swilliams3_at_gc.cuny.edu Tina
Meyerhoff, Instructor, Online Baccalaureate
tinameyerhoff_at_gmail.com
35
to teach, to teach well, and to teach even
better
36
to teach, to teach well, and to teach even
better
37
to teach, to teach well, and to teach even
better
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