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Blended by Design: Designing and Developing a Blended Course

Blended by Design: Designing and Developing a Blended Course. Jennifer Strickland, PhD, jennifer.strickland@mcmail.maricopa.edu. Day 2 Course redesign and engagement. Objectives. Continue with the module design process Describe instructional design techniques used to organize content

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Blended by Design: Designing and Developing a Blended Course

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  1. Blended by Design:Designing and Developing a Blended Course Jennifer Strickland, PhD, jennifer.strickland@mcmail.maricopa.edu

  2. Day 2Course redesign and engagement

  3. Objectives • Continue with the module design process • Describe instructional design techniques used to organize content • Identify course activities suited to the online or classroom environment • Review some classroom technologies • Explore strategies and techniques to infuse student-student and instructor-student interaction and engagement

  4. Why (re)design into blended? • Ensures your design facilitates your course • Engage students in dynamic and vital communities • Students take more responsibility for content and learning • Students learn through active participation and inquiry • Assessing the Role of Teaching Presence from the Learner Perspective Dr. Randy Garrison, Dr. Norm Vaughan. Available at Blended Learning and Course Redesign in Higher Education &http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI07159.pdf.

  5. Mapping Your Course, Part II • Give us a quick overview of how your face to face course maps out • What do you think will “translate” most easily? • What do you think will be most difficult to “translate”?

  6. 5 Principles of Successful Course Redesign • Redesign the whole course. • Encourage active learning. • Provide students with individualized assistance. • Build in ongoing assessment and prompt feedback. • Ensure sufficient time on task and monitor student progress. http://thencat.org/PlanRes/R2R_PrinCR.htm

  7. 4 Basic Redesign Steps • Identify course content for a module • Write learning objectives and develop instructional modules • Select course (re) design strategies: determining which strategy is most appropriate for your course • Integrate course content activities in classroom and online environments: determining what is best suited in either the online or classroom environment

  8. Why Objectives? • Clear statement of what students will be able to do when they are finished with an instructional component • Focuses on student performance • Provides structure: beginning, middle, and end • What are the core concepts your students must learn for each module? • What do they need to know? • What do they need to be able to do? • What will they know as a result of my instruction?

  9. Support Objectives by • Integrating learning technologies • Classroom technologies • Emerging technologies • Online resources • Developing diverse assessment techniques • Infusing active learning, interaction, and peer engagement

  10. Why Modules? • Easier to find course content • Support consistency • Allows students to focus on content rather than form • Content becomes manageable • Prevents information overload • “7 +/-2 rule” Source: Blending In, March 2007

  11. Meeting Objectives • Source: Blending In, March 2007

  12. Course Organization • Dates • Topic • Readings • Section • Unit • Module

  13. The Organization • Course content broken down into “chunks” • Course structure in a repetitive manner allowing for easy navigation • Content organized in conceptually related blocks • Consistent, logical, clear, common sense, apply past experience, let the content set the chunks Source: Blending In, March 2007

  14. Mapping Your CoursePart II • In your chunk or module • What does the instructor do? • What does the learner do? • What can stay in the classroom? • What can happen online? • What is the relationship between the two? • Apply Bloom’s levels

  15. Building Community among Students

  16. What makes a successful community? • Individuals feel safe • Get questions answered • Have conversations • Get resources/information • Support • Friendship • Produce a product • Individual and shared identities

  17. Jane Livingston, 2006, Building Community in a Blended Course, Educause

  18. Building Community • Start early • Make it relevant • Identify connections • Create opportunities for engagement • Encourage participation

  19. Collaboration Benefits • Passive to interactive • Increase retention of class materials • Develops critical thinking skills • Knowledge construction • Builds community • Team building • Interpersonal skills • Importance of emphasizing the relationship of interactive activities to “content”

  20. Power Law of Participation Ross Mayfield: http://ross.typepad.com/blog/2006/04/power_law_of_pa.html

  21. In Class: Student Collaborative or Interactive Activities • In class writing activities • 5 minute discussion questions • Scripted scenarios for role playing • Think-Pair-Share • Note Check • Case Studies • Discussions • Group Projects

  22. Online: Student Collaborative or Interactive Activities • Case studies • Discussions • Forums: Panel or Symposium • Experiential Learning • Group Projects • Role-play • Games & Simulations • Demonstrations • Online Presentations • http://www.ion.illinois.edu/resources/tutorials/pedagogy/instructionalstrategies.asp

  23. Activity • Keeping your module in mind, develop a community-building activity for use online or in the classroom • Report out

  24. Break

  25. Facilitating and Assessing Online Discussions

  26. Please think about and answer the following questions. • How do you use classroom discussion in your current courses? • How do you assess students?

  27. Written Communication in the Online Environment • Netiquette: • http://www.albion.com/netiquette/corerules.html

  28. Discussion boards must be graded with substantial points assigned

  29. Source: Teaching Online A Practical Guide by Ko and Rossen Ways to Use a Discussion Board • Prepare for upcoming in-class discussion (pre-assignment) • Reading • Review of literature • Follow-up to in-class discussion (continue discussion or post-assignment) • Extension of in-class discussion and assignments (exploratory, will not be covered in class)

  30. Source: Teaching Online A Practical Guide by Ko and Rossen Ways to Use a Discussion Board Continued • Question and answer forum (to create an FAQ page) • Pose a problem and have students generate possible solutions – discuss those solutions • Students post homework or projects and get classmate feedback • Case study

  31. Ways to Use a Discussion Board Continued • Students critique classmates’ work using provided evaluation guidelines • Find/evaluate web resources on lesson/topic and discuss results • Invite guest speakers/lecturers • Debate about topic

  32. Quick Tip! • Consider allowing students to self assign groups that will take charge of and moderate/track a particular week’s interaction • Facilitate • Summarize • Record • Track participation • Lead discussion

  33. Lessons from the Cyberspace Classroom: The Realities of Online Teaching, Rena Palloff and Keith Pratt (pg. 121) Questioning Techniques • “Name and describe three social systems theories that apply to community development.” • “What theory of community development did you find yourself relating to most? Why? How would you apply that theory to our learning community?”

  34. Moderating and Facilitating Online Discussion • Encourage participation • Ensure that some students don’t dominate • Keep discussion focused • Bring out multiple perspectives • Summarize highlights • Do not dominate or be over-involved in the discussion Source: Gregg Kearsley Online Education: Learning and Teaching in Cyberspace, Wadsworth: 2000, p. 85 Source: Tom Nolan, Sonoma State University http://www.sonoma.edu/users/n/nolan/501/powerpoint/moderating_facilitating/

  35. Discussion Boards in Your Hybrids • How will you use the discussion board? • See Discussion Board Ideas handout

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