This document discusses flipped instruction, which involves assigning lecture videos and readings as homework so that class time can be used for more engaging activities like discussions and projects. It provides an overview of what flipped instruction is, why it should be used, and how to implement it. Examples are given of apps that can be used to create videos and do polling and formative assessments. Tips are provided for getting started with flipped instruction and ensuring student engagement, such as checking their comprehension of pre-class materials.
Blending Pedagogy and Technology for Deep LearningKaroline Manny
油
The document discusses how technology can be used as a tool to promote deep learning. It states that technology is not a pedagogy itself but can be used to solve problems experienced in traditional classrooms. Some ways discussed to promote deep learning include using clickers and laptops for in-class assessments, creating websites and podcasts to make materials accessible, and having students collaborate on experiential and problem-based projects using technologies like blogs, wikis, and video. The goal is to make students actively engaged in relating content to their lives and collaborating with others.
This document provides guidance for instructors on transitioning a course from seated to online. It discusses why online learning is beneficial for both students and instructors, highlighting increased flexibility and accessibility. It then offers tips for promoting interaction and presence online through introductions, organization, instruction, and feedback. The document emphasizes careful course design and integration of technologies like videos and discussion boards. It stresses the importance of building community through clear expectations, online office hours, and soliciting feedback.
The document introduces flipped instruction, which moves lectures outside of class time through videos or other activities, freeing up class time for more interactive activities. It discusses how flipped instruction allows for differentiation, active learning, and better use of class time. Tips are provided for successful implementation, including using apps and videos, considering student engagement, and getting started gradually. Potential pros and cons are outlined. The presenters are available for more information on creating flipped classrooms.
What's the big deal about Blended Learning - Models, Results and ChallengesTerry Anderson
油
This document discusses blended learning models, results, and challenges. It begins by providing context about Athabasca University, a fully online Canadian university. It then discusses definitions of blended learning, which generally involve a mix of online and face-to-face learning. Research shows that blended learning can improve student achievement and satisfaction compared to solely face-to-face or online instruction when implemented well. However, blended learning also presents challenges related to design, facilitation, and assessing student work. The document concludes by discussing how universities may need to adapt physical campus spaces and services to complement online and blended learning.
This presentation discusses facilitating online participation and learning. It emphasizes encouraging participation through introductions, varied communication methods, active facilitation with questions and feedback, and technical and task support. It also stresses sustaining motivation with tutor and peer support, including one-on-one tutorials and study buddies. The document considers tutor skills for synchronous and asynchronous work, such as planning, listening, questioning, giving feedback, and reformulating. It emphasizes matching content and format and knowing when to use synchronous versus asynchronous media. Finally, it provides a decision tool to help design online courses by considering factors such as staff, students, content, learning outcomes, and evaluation.
This document provides an overview of HyFlex teaching and learning at Middlesex Community College. It discusses preparing for HyFlex instruction, supporting faculty and students, HyFlex teaching scenarios, and HyFlex classroom technology. The document outlines the three modes of HyFlex instruction - face-to-face, synchronous online, and asynchronous online. It also provides tips for structuring a HyFlex course in Blackboard and setting student expectations for the classroom environment. Faculty support resources are highlighted, including instructional design support and technology support. HyFlex teaching scenarios are demonstrated, such as sharing slides, videos, annotations, and facilitating class discussions. An overview of the classroom technology concludes the document.
How forced online classes can finally enable educators to improve learningFred Pacheco
油
Prof.油Fred Pacheco presents how our current scenario of forced online education can be seen as an unique opportunity to accelerate the innovation and finally implement all the tools and techniques to effectively improve learning process. The lecture will show some case and results from initiatives during social isolation, pointing out the methodologies and techniques. It's not just a matter of going online; it's necessary to understand e- pedagogy. This presentation, them, aborda active learning and other techniques for online learning.
This presentation addresses student technology ownership patterns and preferences, hybrid learning models, as well as innovations/developments in microlearning, collaborative learning, and microcredentialing.
A day-long workshop conducted with the faculty of Wheelock College on June 27, 2014
Companion website is located at
https://northeastern.digication.com/blened_learning_workshop
This document discusses learning styles and how to engage students with different styles in online courses. It identifies four main learning styles: visual/verbal, visual/nonverbal, auditory/verbal, and tactile/kinesthetic. Most students have a combination of styles. The document recommends designing learning activities to accommodate different styles, such as using written and visual materials, audio lectures, discussions, projects, and collaboration tools. It provides examples of how strategies like lectures, discussions, and project-based learning can be adapted to the online environment to engage students with diverse learning preferences.
Information for teachers who are new to online. Features tips and best practices as well as useful links and videos. Information based on recent literature.
Facilitating in and with the Fully Online Learning Community (FOLC) Modelrolandv
油
Participants will explore how fully online facilitation assists learners in the construction of new
procedural and declarative knowledge.
Concepts discussed will include:
Constructivism-informed Education Processes
Reduction of transactional distance
Collaborative processes
Principles of PBL Online Facilitation (Savin-Baden, 2007)
The document provides guidance on using technology and digital tools to support language teaching. It discusses how today's students prefer learning through teamwork, flexibility, student-centered projects, and having their voices respected. The document then recommends using resources to develop communication, digital literacy, critical thinking, web-based projects, student-created media, and collaboration. It also discusses supplementary materials, digital literacy, flipped classrooms, blended learning, and various web 2.0 tools that can be used to engage students in activity-based language learning.
This document provides an overview of HyFlex teaching and learning at MCC. It discusses preparing for HyFlex instruction, supporting faculty and students, HyFlex teaching scenarios, and HyFlex classroom technology. The agenda includes an overview of HyFlex at MCC, preparing for HyFlex instruction, supporting faculty and students, HyFlex teaching scenarios, and a Q&A session. It provides examples of engaging students both in-person and online through activities like sharing slides, videos, annotations, discussions, and group work using the classroom technology.
Setting up the Learner-Centered Classroom. pdfAwee Hibanada
油
The passage criticizes the traditional classroom model of passive learning and argues that a more active approach is needed. It notes that the traditional model does not fit changing needs and is a passive way of learning, while the modern world requires a more active processing of information.
A 5E Lesson Plan to Promote the Use of Reflective-Reflexive Practices by In...Brehaniea Wight
油
EDLM6200 - Reflective-Reflexive Practices in Technology Enabled Environments
Link for full lesson plan: https://drive.google.com/file/d/17adoZAcv0x5clfB0IbgXc328d08awnJ3/view?usp=sharing
In todays slideshare, we look at the use of digital technology to enhance reflective-reflexive practice in a 5E lesson plan. It is in response to a teachers sudden and drastic shift from the traditional classroom to a strictly online learning environment. While learning takes place in the synchronous environment through live conferences, it is supported using an asynchronous learning management platform.
The 5e model of instruction will empower the students to take responsibility for their own learning. The teacher will guide the students through the five phases - engage, explore, explain, elaborate, and evaluate. Students will engage in reflective-reflexive practice in each phase using online digital tools.. The reflective-reflexive process will incorporate works from reflective gurus such as
Kolb - learning through experience
Gibbs - emotional feelings, action plan
Brookfield - four critical lenses - self, peers, experts and literature
Sch旦ns reflective models - reflection before, during and after
This document discusses flipping the classroom model of education. It defines flipping the classroom as moving direct instruction from group to individual learning spaces so that class time can be used for dynamic, interactive learning guided by the teacher. The document outlines reasons for flipping a classroom, including allowing students to learn at their own pace and increasing interaction. It provides a 6-step process for implementing flipping: plan the lesson, record an instructional video, share the video with students, change how class time is used, separate students into groups, and have groups share their work. The goal is to use class time for active, collaborative learning activities.
Working online - tutor skills
for handling online chats, discussions, content
by Paula Rebolledo, Gabriel Far鱈as and Ang辿lica Kaulen
A summary for BC Chile 2: E-Moderation: A Training Course for Online Tutors [June 2013]
This document provides an overview of flipping the classroom and strategies for implementing a flipped model. It defines flipping as having students learn content outside of class through videos or other online materials, then using class time for applying knowledge and discussion. It emphasizes setting goals, choosing appropriate technology, creating short concise videos and assessments, and providing a simple organized web presence for students to access materials. The document also shares examples of tools and additional resources for flipping classrooms.
Presented as part of our "Blended Learning" month at PLU, this presentation covers the basics of blended learning and why it is an effective means of instruction.
This document provides an overview of HyFlex teaching and learning at Middlesex Community College. It discusses preparing for HyFlex instruction, supporting faculty and students, HyFlex teaching scenarios, and HyFlex classroom technology. The document outlines the three modes of HyFlex instruction - face-to-face, synchronous online, and asynchronous online. It also provides tips for structuring a HyFlex course in Blackboard and setting student expectations for the classroom environment. Faculty support resources are highlighted, including instructional design support and technology support. HyFlex teaching scenarios are demonstrated, such as sharing slides, videos, annotations, and facilitating class discussions. An overview of the classroom technology concludes the document.
How forced online classes can finally enable educators to improve learningFred Pacheco
油
Prof.油Fred Pacheco presents how our current scenario of forced online education can be seen as an unique opportunity to accelerate the innovation and finally implement all the tools and techniques to effectively improve learning process. The lecture will show some case and results from initiatives during social isolation, pointing out the methodologies and techniques. It's not just a matter of going online; it's necessary to understand e- pedagogy. This presentation, them, aborda active learning and other techniques for online learning.
This presentation addresses student technology ownership patterns and preferences, hybrid learning models, as well as innovations/developments in microlearning, collaborative learning, and microcredentialing.
A day-long workshop conducted with the faculty of Wheelock College on June 27, 2014
Companion website is located at
https://northeastern.digication.com/blened_learning_workshop
This document discusses learning styles and how to engage students with different styles in online courses. It identifies four main learning styles: visual/verbal, visual/nonverbal, auditory/verbal, and tactile/kinesthetic. Most students have a combination of styles. The document recommends designing learning activities to accommodate different styles, such as using written and visual materials, audio lectures, discussions, projects, and collaboration tools. It provides examples of how strategies like lectures, discussions, and project-based learning can be adapted to the online environment to engage students with diverse learning preferences.
Information for teachers who are new to online. Features tips and best practices as well as useful links and videos. Information based on recent literature.
Facilitating in and with the Fully Online Learning Community (FOLC) Modelrolandv
油
Participants will explore how fully online facilitation assists learners in the construction of new
procedural and declarative knowledge.
Concepts discussed will include:
Constructivism-informed Education Processes
Reduction of transactional distance
Collaborative processes
Principles of PBL Online Facilitation (Savin-Baden, 2007)
The document provides guidance on using technology and digital tools to support language teaching. It discusses how today's students prefer learning through teamwork, flexibility, student-centered projects, and having their voices respected. The document then recommends using resources to develop communication, digital literacy, critical thinking, web-based projects, student-created media, and collaboration. It also discusses supplementary materials, digital literacy, flipped classrooms, blended learning, and various web 2.0 tools that can be used to engage students in activity-based language learning.
This document provides an overview of HyFlex teaching and learning at MCC. It discusses preparing for HyFlex instruction, supporting faculty and students, HyFlex teaching scenarios, and HyFlex classroom technology. The agenda includes an overview of HyFlex at MCC, preparing for HyFlex instruction, supporting faculty and students, HyFlex teaching scenarios, and a Q&A session. It provides examples of engaging students both in-person and online through activities like sharing slides, videos, annotations, discussions, and group work using the classroom technology.
Setting up the Learner-Centered Classroom. pdfAwee Hibanada
油
The passage criticizes the traditional classroom model of passive learning and argues that a more active approach is needed. It notes that the traditional model does not fit changing needs and is a passive way of learning, while the modern world requires a more active processing of information.
A 5E Lesson Plan to Promote the Use of Reflective-Reflexive Practices by In...Brehaniea Wight
油
EDLM6200 - Reflective-Reflexive Practices in Technology Enabled Environments
Link for full lesson plan: https://drive.google.com/file/d/17adoZAcv0x5clfB0IbgXc328d08awnJ3/view?usp=sharing
In todays slideshare, we look at the use of digital technology to enhance reflective-reflexive practice in a 5E lesson plan. It is in response to a teachers sudden and drastic shift from the traditional classroom to a strictly online learning environment. While learning takes place in the synchronous environment through live conferences, it is supported using an asynchronous learning management platform.
The 5e model of instruction will empower the students to take responsibility for their own learning. The teacher will guide the students through the five phases - engage, explore, explain, elaborate, and evaluate. Students will engage in reflective-reflexive practice in each phase using online digital tools.. The reflective-reflexive process will incorporate works from reflective gurus such as
Kolb - learning through experience
Gibbs - emotional feelings, action plan
Brookfield - four critical lenses - self, peers, experts and literature
Sch旦ns reflective models - reflection before, during and after
This document discusses flipping the classroom model of education. It defines flipping the classroom as moving direct instruction from group to individual learning spaces so that class time can be used for dynamic, interactive learning guided by the teacher. The document outlines reasons for flipping a classroom, including allowing students to learn at their own pace and increasing interaction. It provides a 6-step process for implementing flipping: plan the lesson, record an instructional video, share the video with students, change how class time is used, separate students into groups, and have groups share their work. The goal is to use class time for active, collaborative learning activities.
Working online - tutor skills
for handling online chats, discussions, content
by Paula Rebolledo, Gabriel Far鱈as and Ang辿lica Kaulen
A summary for BC Chile 2: E-Moderation: A Training Course for Online Tutors [June 2013]
This document provides an overview of flipping the classroom and strategies for implementing a flipped model. It defines flipping as having students learn content outside of class through videos or other online materials, then using class time for applying knowledge and discussion. It emphasizes setting goals, choosing appropriate technology, creating short concise videos and assessments, and providing a simple organized web presence for students to access materials. The document also shares examples of tools and additional resources for flipping classrooms.
Presented as part of our "Blended Learning" month at PLU, this presentation covers the basics of blended learning and why it is an effective means of instruction.
How to attach file using upload button Odoo 18Celine George
油
In this slide, well discuss on how to attach file using upload button Odoo 18. Odoo features a dedicated model, 'ir.attachments,' designed for storing attachments submitted by end users. We can see the process of utilizing the 'ir.attachments' model to enable file uploads through web forms in this slide.
How to use Init Hooks in Odoo 18 - Odoo 際際滷sCeline George
油
In this slide, well discuss on how to use Init Hooks in Odoo 18. In Odoo, Init Hooks are essential functions specified as strings in the __init__ file of a module.
Computer Network Unit IV - Lecture Notes - Network LayerMurugan146644
油
Title:
Lecture Notes - Unit IV - The Network Layer
Description:
Welcome to the comprehensive guide on Computer Network concepts, tailored for final year B.Sc. Computer Science students affiliated with Alagappa University. This document covers fundamental principles and advanced topics in Computer Network. PDF content is prepared from the text book Computer Network by Andrew S. Tenanbaum
Key Topics Covered:
Main Topic : The Network Layer
Sub-Topic : Network Layer Design Issues (Store and forward packet switching , service provided to the transport layer, implementation of connection less service, implementation of connection oriented service, Comparision of virtual circuit and datagram subnet), Routing algorithms (Shortest path routing, Flooding , Distance Vector routing algorithm, Link state routing algorithm , hierarchical routing algorithm, broadcast routing, multicast routing algorithm)
Other Link :
1.Introduction to computer network - /slideshow/lecture-notes-introduction-to-computer-network/274183454
2. Physical Layer - /slideshow/lecture-notes-unit-ii-the-physical-layer/274747125
3. Data Link Layer Part 1 : /slideshow/lecture-notes-unit-iii-the-datalink-layer/275288798
Target Audience:
Final year B.Sc. Computer Science students at Alagappa University seeking a solid foundation in Computer Network principles for academic.
About the Author:
Dr. S. Murugan is Associate Professor at Alagappa Government Arts College, Karaikudi. With 23 years of teaching experience in the field of Computer Science, Dr. S. Murugan has a passion for simplifying complex concepts in Computer Network
Disclaimer:
This document is intended for educational purposes only. The content presented here reflects the authors understanding in the field of Computer Network
APM People Interest Network Conference 2025
-Autonomy, Teams and Tension: Projects under stress
-Tim Lyons
-The neurological levels of
team-working: Harmony and tensions
With a background in projects spanning more than 40 years, Tim Lyons specialised in the delivery of large, complex, multi-disciplinary programmes for clients including Crossrail, Network Rail, ExxonMobil, Siemens and in patent development. His first career was in broadcasting, where he designed and built commercial radio station studios in Manchester, Cardiff and Bristol, also working as a presenter and programme producer. Tim now writes and presents extensively on matters relating to the human and neurological aspects of projects, including communication, ethics and coaching. He holds a Masters degree in NLP, is an NLP Master Practitioner and International Coach. He is the Deputy Lead for APMs People Interest Network.
Session | The Neurological Levels of Team-working: Harmony and Tensions
Understanding how teams really work at conscious and unconscious levels is critical to a harmonious workplace. This session uncovers what those levels are, how to use them to detect and avoid tensions and how to smooth the management of change by checking you have considered all of them.
How to Configure Restaurants in Odoo 17 Point of SaleCeline George
油
Odoo, a versatile and integrated business management software, excels with its robust Point of Sale (POS) module. This guide delves into the intricacies of configuring restaurants in Odoo 17 POS, unlocking numerous possibilities for streamlined operations and enhanced customer experiences.
APM event hosted by the South Wales and West of England Network (SWWE Network)
Speaker: Aalok Sonawala
The SWWE Regional Network were very pleased to welcome Aalok Sonawala, Head of PMO, National Programmes, Rider Levett Bucknall on 26 February, to BAWA for our first face to face event of 2025. Aalok is a member of APMs Thames Valley Regional Network and also speaks to members of APMs PMO Interest Network, which aims to facilitate collaboration and learning, offer unbiased advice and guidance.
Tonight, Aalok planned to discuss the importance of a PMO within project-based organisations, the different types of PMO and their key elements, PMO governance and centres of excellence.
PMOs within an organisation can be centralised, hub and spoke with a central PMO with satellite PMOs globally, or embedded within projects. The appropriate structure will be determined by the specific business needs of the organisation. The PMO sits above PM delivery and the supply chain delivery teams.
For further information about the event please click here.
Reordering Rules in Odoo 17 Inventory - Odoo 際際滷sCeline George
油
In Odoo 17, the Inventory module allows us to set up reordering rules to ensure that our stock levels are maintained, preventing stockouts. Let's explore how this feature works.
How to Configure Flexible Working Schedule in Odoo 18 EmployeeCeline George
油
In this slide, well discuss on how to configure flexible working schedule in Odoo 18 Employee module. In Odoo 18, the Employee module offers powerful tools to configure and manage flexible working schedules tailored to your organization's needs.
The Constitution, Government and Law making bodies .saanidhyapatel09
油
This PowerPoint presentation provides an insightful overview of the Constitution, covering its key principles, features, and significance. It explains the fundamental rights, duties, structure of government, and the importance of constitutional law in governance. Ideal for students, educators, and anyone interested in understanding the foundation of a nations legal framework.
2. What do we mean?
Engaging your learner
Students need to be engaged for
learning to happen
Engage students in multiple
instructional modes
Connection, motivation, collaboration
cognition, brain, active (not passive)
online, face-to-face, virtual, blended
Program Description: Effective teaching fosters learning; students need to be
engaged for learning to happen. This session introduces strategies to engage
students in multiple instructional modes.
3. Engagement Types of Interaction
Student Instructor
Student Content
Student Student
Student Technology
When these interactions develop instructor, cognitive, and social presence, they
help students feel part of a community.
Nilson, L. B., & Goodson, L. A. (2021). Online teaching at its best: Merging Instructional Design with teaching and learning research. Jossey-Bass.
4. The Why: Building Community
Social presence: participants ability to establish themselves as real/authentic selves in their
academic community
Cognitive presence: participants ability to construct meaning and confirm understanding
Teaching presence (instructors ability to design, facilitate, and provide direct instruction)
The interplay of the social presence, cognitive presence, and teaching presence cultivates a
community that provides optimal support for student learning. Deliberate community building is
therefore a key component of successful student engagement and performance in class.
Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework (Garrison, 2009; Garrison et al., 2010)
https://ctl.columbia.edu/resources-and-technology/teaching-with-technology/teaching-online/community-building/
6. Where are your top 3 high-demand areas?
Demand on your time, energy, patience, skill, something else.
Online Virtual Face-to-Face
Student-Student
Student-Instructor
Student-Content
Student-Technology
7. Instructor Student Interactions
Differences of instructional methods
Face-to-Face
Spontaneous
interaction
Physical environment
Virtual
Synchronous like a
classroom, but it's
not a classroom
Spontaneous
interaction, yes but...
Online
Asynchronous
8. Student Instructor Interaction Ideas: Virtual
Establish your presence right away tell them a little about yourself and why you love teaching this
subject. Share a picture of yourself or your pet.
Change up virtual backgrounds and "no-camera" image
Learn about your students (start with their names)
Start each class with "What's your favorite?"
Ask students to change name on Zoom their name preference
Non-verbal feedback option in Zoom
Gauge readiness to begin class, lecture, activity
Gauge understanding
"Old fashioned emojis"
Provide frequent feedback to students
Regular, anonymous surveys (not graded)
9. The Virtual Class: Improve teaching with
regular, anonymous surveys
How comfortable do you feel using technology for our virtual classroom? (You can use a
Likert scale here, with a score of 1 being not at all comfortable and a 5 being very
comfortable.)
Have you encountered any technical issues, such as not being able to connect to the
internet or not being able to hear me or other students talking?
Are assignments clear? Are you able to access them?
Are you having any trouble finding assignments, links to articles, or other documents
online? Is the virtual space well organized?
Do you feel like your voice is heard?
Do you feel like you belong in our virtual classroom?
What can I do to improve our virtual classroom?
https://www.edutopia.org/article/reading-virtual-classroom-hard-it-can-be-done
10. Student-Content, Student-Student
Interaction
Hitting Pause: Breaks for learning
and engagement
Why are breaks important for learning and
student engagement?
Helps students chunk information into
meaningful parts
Helps students engage with material in a
variety of ways
Improves student focus and attention (less
zoning out)
Improves student retention of information
(Rice, 2018)
10
11. Starting Pause: Focus
Attention
Mid Pause: Re-
Focus Attention
Mid Pause: Re-
Focus Attention
Closing Pause:
Capture Learning
Example: Graffiti Board Short Write Quiz-Quiz-Trade Four Square
Feedback
Face-to-Face Word, picture or phrase is
written on the whiteboard
as students enter
classroom, students add
to it as they get settled
Ask class a question
about lecture/class
activities on which
to write a brief
response could
also be open ended
summary
Students write quiz
questions based on
first half of class and
quiz each other
Ensure instructor stops
delivering content with
time left in class. Use
grid to write personal
notes or ideas to share
Zoom/Virtual Use whiteboard feature in
Zoom
Same as f2f
writing could be in
chat or on paper
Ask in full class or
breakout rooms
Use as personal
summary or
opportunity to share
Asynchronous
Online
Discussion board do this
first sequence online
learning activities
Use after short
lecture or content
videos
Have students submit
quiz questions use
to build quiz in next
unit
Post table in course and
have students submit
as assignment or topic
for discussion
12. Four Square
Feedback
Example
What did I learn that was
really important?
How did I learn what
contributed to my learning?
How will this make me more
effective in this subject?
What are my next steps?
13. General recommendations
for Hitting Pause
Be creative use a variety of pausing
strategies
Give students a set amount of time for
the pause 2 minutes is usually
enough
Ensure the pauses are purposeful
linked to course learning objectives
and assessments
Consider student needs
13
14. Longer Engagement Strategies
What do all these activities have
in common?
What separates them?
Do some feel more appropriate to
your discipline? Why or why not?
Made with: https://classic.wordclouds.com/
15. Engaging with Technology
Using The Learning Space
Students who do not know how to open the door will have trouble. (Nilson & Goodson,
2021)
Are students prepared to use the technology required? Are instructors?
Accessing content and submission of assignments through Blackboard
Interaction with - and feedback from instructors
Engaging with classmates in and out of class
Know Your Support: IT Help, Blackboard Support, CELT, AV (classroom)
Hardware: content may appear different depending on device, browser
Anytime access: students accessing and submitting content around the clock
16. Student <->Instructor
Well-designed interactions improve student motivation, satisfaction, and
achievement, help students develop a sense of belonging, and keep them from
feeling the sense of isolation that diminishes persistence. (Nilson & Goodson, 2021)
Asynchronous Communication - Announcements
Weekly updates, reminders for students, motivation!
Use avatars, images, memes more personal, casual, humorous
Video messaging builds rapport
Synchronous Communication - Zoom
Virtual classes chat, whiteboard, polling, screen sharing
Breakout rooms for one-on-one consultations and small group discussions
Office hours
Optional Q&A sessions for F2F or online classes
17. Student <-> Student
Meaningful student-student interactions can involve sharing, discussion, debate, collaboration,
peer review, or peer instruction These interactions and the sense of class community do not
depend on whether communication is asynchronous or synchronous (Nilson & Goodson, 2021)
Collaborative projects often initiated by students themselves
Zoom: Group projects, study groups
Social media: student resources and interest groups
Shared documents
Online whiteboards, flip charts, sticky notes
Asynchronous Collaboration assigned assessments
Discussion boards
Video/audio recording options
VoiceThread
Incorporate multimedia elements in prompts and responses
18. Student <-> Content
Students interaction with the content through various technologies needs to be clean and lean, or they will be less likely
to use it It must be relevant, accurate, useful, and directly related to the course learning outcomes. (Nilson & Goodson,
2021)
LMS: Blackboard
Module/Syllabus
際際滷shows (PowerPoint, Prezi)
3rd
party resources: ebooks, podcasts, videos, websites
Tools for success: TutorMe, SafeAssign
Submission of assignments
Brief video lectures or recaps to transition between units of content
10-15 minutes maximum
Students are able to engage with content in an interactive way, according to their needs
Take notes, pause, and replay audio/video content
Work through chunked content as it fits into their schedule
19. Know Your Support
WHO TO CONTACT FOR
Technical Support
IT Help Desk ithelpdesk@cuw.edu 262.243.HELP
(4357)
Blackboard Support and all technical support (reset password,
Zoom assistance, etc.)
Assistance for Faculty
Center for Excellence in
Learning and Teaching (CELT)
www.cuw.edu/celt Professional development program offerings; instructional
design contacts; pedagogical best practices
Dr. Diana Belscamper Diana.Belscamper@cuw.edu 262.243.1802 Distance Learning Specialist pedagogy and practices for
online and virtual faculty
Registrar registrar@cuw.edu 262.243.4345 Administrative withdrawals failure to start and excessive
absence; grade changes
Assistance for Students
Academic Resource Center
(ARC)
swarc@cuw.edu 262.243.2623 Student need-based accommodations; tutoring; Writing
Center
Center for Academic Advising
and Career Engagement
(CAACE)
caace@cuw.edu 262.243.4499 Student support (concerns about absences, performance,
etc.); registration assistance
Concordia Central www.cuw.edu/students/concordia-central 24/7 access for student support (advising, billing, financial aid,
etc.)
Student Counseling Center studentwellness@cuw.edu 262.243.2244 Student mental health resources
20. Four Square Feedback Example
What did I learn that was
really important?
How did I learn what
contributed to my learning?
How will this make me more
effective in this subject?
What are my next steps?
Editor's Notes
#3: Why are these interactions important?
Of the four, Student Instructor interaction makes the biggest difference in student success.油
#4: Originated with online teaching, but applies to all instructional methods.
#7: Why is virtual teaching so hard?油https://www.edutopia.org/article/reading-virtual-classroom-hard-it-can-be-done油
Student Instructor
Eye gaze, facial expression, can students hear me, can't walk around the room,油
Student Content
Can students access the materials (during and outside of class)
Student Student
Can students hear each other, is there quality interaction during class time
Student Technology
Do students have the appropriate technology, learning space
In the classroom interactions can be spontaneous not so much in the virtual classroom
#8: Because facial expression, body language is hard to read give and ask for feedback frequently.
#9: Survey multiple times, acknowledge results, group feedback about what you've changed, or cannot change.
Ask Kate and Diana to provide some examples from their teaching experience (f2f, online)
#11: Graffiti board using the Whiteboard feature (under Share screen), have a picture, problem or prompt for students to respond to. Most user-friendly for a brief (1-2 word) response, numerical response, or simple drawing
Short Write review, three important concepts, post a question
Quiz - Ask students to write a quiz question based on the material.
In a small class, students could read their question to the entire group on Zoom.
In a larger class, try using breakout groups for students to quiz each other in small groups