Teaching Online about Online Teaching - Sharing and request for literature recommendations

Teaching Online about Online Teaching - Sharing and request for literature recommendations

by Ryan Hazen -
Number of replies: 6

Hi everyone at Moot Global and in the Open EdTech Community!

I've been training faculty to teach online at a small liberal arts college in Montana for a few years. I also facilitated one of the beta tests for the MEC and have done some trainings for other institutions in my spare time. 

I've landed on a pretty digestible set of principles that I think can help guide online development for educators in the event you need to create a home grown online training plan for teachers. Here they are:

Be Present

Students need to know you are "there." Establish patterns of communication and be proactive reaching out to students. We learn in social context, so try to make yourself as present as possible for your learners.

Be Engaging

Students need to do cognitive work with the content you wish for them to learn. To achieve this online, you have to require students to stop regularly during the delivery of content and do some sort of work with it - assignments, quizzes, H5P activities, workshops, and forums are all tools that can help you do this.

Quality Content Matters

The quality of modern professionally developed online marketing and entertainment content is exceptional. Our students have expectations that online experiences be visually appealing and easy to work with. Keep this in mind and make an effort to reduce clicks and confusion in everything you make.

Know your Tools

This seems obvious, but is difficult to achieve with Moodle for beginners. Moodle is the most flexible and robust LMS on the planet. This is a great thing, but it makes Moodle fairly complex - after all, the more options you have the more buttons there are to click. This can be overwhelming. Teachers just starting out in online education should have the chance to see working examples of as many tools as possible before designing their own courses. Otherwise, they tend to end up with an over reliance on a single module or use the wrong module for a given objective.

I have attached the syllabus for this course, which contains a complete bibliography. I am also including a link to a presentation about this from NWMET 2015. I originally designed this course in 2014, so the literature needs to be updated, but I'm sharing it here in case anyone wants to use it. 

As I redesign this for 2020, I want to include some more current literature about this topic and replace a few readings from the bibliography. I would appreciate it if anyone has suggestions in this area. 

Thanks, and Happy Moodling!

In reply to Ryan Hazen

Re: Teaching Online about Online Teaching - Sharing and request for literature recommendations

by Darren Hall -

Hi Ryan,

Thanks for sharing your syllabus and the presentation video about your Online Teaching course. In the aftermath of the quick pivot to online teaching and learning due to the pandemic, I'm looking at ways to better prepare our faculty for the fall semester. As has been discussed in a lot of places like the Chronicle of Higher Ed and Inside Higher Ed, faculty were understandably cut a lot of slack this spring in terms of the quality of their online offerings, but students will be less forgiving in the future (and rightfully so).

In any case, I like very much your distillation of four principles as a way to help educators focus on key fundamentals. It seems to me, too, that each principle exists on a continuum, so you can work with faculty to start with discrete, doable tasks that they can then improve upon as they gain experience and confidence in what is for many a new modality of course delivery.

You wrote back in November about a redesign for 2020. Curious how the current situation has impacted how and what you plan to teach. Would you be willing to share an mbz file of your course for local adaptation?

Cheers,

Darren Hall

Academic Technology Specialist, Occidental College

In reply to Darren Hall

Re: Teaching Online about Online Teaching - Sharing and request for literature recommendations

by Ryan Hazen -

Hi Darren,

I was in the middle of working on this course when this email came through. I am going to deploy the revised version starting on May 26. I'll post it when I have the course finished.

I am also creating second step of the course. I currently have a few dozen teachers that have taken the fundamentals course mentioned in the original post that want an update, so I'm trying to get them to work together to do a collaborative course review as a second step. Maybe we can even get some faculty working together across our institutions?

I'll reach out when I get finished with my revisions. Nice to hear from you!

Ryan

In reply to Ryan Hazen

Re: Teaching Online about Online Teaching - Sharing and request for literature recommendations

by Darren Hall -

Hi Ryan,

Hoping things are going well with launching your revised version of the course. Is it ready to share?

Cross institutional collaboration is an intriguing idea. Curious what sort of things you had in mind? Fee free to reach out to me directly at halld@oxy.edu.

Best,

Darren

In reply to Darren Hall

Odp: Re: Teaching Online about Online Teaching - Sharing and request for literature recommendations

by Anna Grabowska -
Hello Ryna,

is it possible to join the course?
I am responsible for teaching online seniors (70,80+).

Stay safe and healthy
Anna
In reply to Anna Grabowska

Re: Odp: Re: Teaching Online about Online Teaching - Sharing and request for literature recommendations

by Ryan Hazen -
Not possible to join the course (its already completely full of Carroll faculty), but I am considering offering one for the public. I'll post here when i do! 
In reply to Darren Hall

Re: Teaching Online about Online Teaching - Sharing and request for literature recommendations

by Ryan Hazen -
I'm emailing Darren separately from this, but generally we're interested in facilitating cross-institutional collaboration around best teaching practices - teachers teaching other teachers, in other words. We've had a lot of success with this model at my institution, and I think it makes sense to spread it our as far as possible.