
The DL newsletter is a monthly online flyer published
by IDEAL (Interactive Distance Education for All Learners) to provide
faculty with current news and initiatives in online learning at BGSU.
Each newsletter will contain online pedagogy articles, training and
workshop dates, online teaching tips, online teaching resources, and
interviews with BGSU faculty or staff who teach online.
DL
News and Updates
- "BGSU is accredited from the North Central Association
for its distance learning programs at BGSU and has also been granted
the "Best Practices in Student Services" designation by
the Ohio Learning Network."
** Join the growing
community of leaders in distance learning
at BGSU by participating in the free 3
week ONLINE faculty training program beginning
August 1st.**
- The next IDEAL Online Faculty Training Program begins August
1st and ends August 19th-- Sign up soon to reserve your spot in the
course.
- Click
here to view details and register or call
IDEAL secretary,Debbie, at 419-372-6792.
- IDEAL also offers face-to-face training for online course
design:
- Click
here to view face-to-face training schedule for online
course design.
- Blackboard Course Management System
update
Blackboard Release 6.2 has just been installed and provides additional functionality
as well as resolves many issues experienced with the current version of Blackboard.
Listed below are new features of Blackboard 6.2:
Test Answer Download: Instructors can now
download the results of a test. This allows them to track student
performance across sections of a course and across semesters
using 3rd-party statistical analysis tools.
Survey Response Download: Instructors and
organization managers can now aggregate data and perform item-level
analysis.
Quick Tool Linking: Instructors can now add
material to the content page, add a discussion board forum,
add a live chat, or any tool directly in any area of the course
with only a few clicks.
SCORM Player: This simplifies the proper handling
and display of SCORM 1.2 and NLN compliant content by bundling
the player into Blackboard.
IMS Content Player: This supports reuse of
content developed under IMS standards within specific content
areas, facilitating faculty collaboration with peers and use
of the best quality content.
For information about resolved issues and for more details about the upgrade
to Blackboard 6.2, go to: http://www.bgsu.edu/offices/its/blackboard/bb62.html
Effective
Online Pedagogy: Choosing the right online
assessment to meet your learning objectives.
There are many ways to approach assessment in
distance learning just as there are many options in the traditional
classroom. By using an assortment of assessment methods online, you
will address the students’ different learning styles and more
effectively measure if the intended learning outcomes are being achieved.
- Assessment methods for students to:
- Think
critically and make judgments: Discussion,
Essays, Reports, Journals, Guided
Research, Group Collaboration
- Solve
problems and develop plans: Case
Studies, Simulations/Role Play,
Team Design, Drill-and-Practice
- Perform
procedures and demonstrate techniques: Hands-on
Activity, Virtual Classroom
- Manage
and develop oneself: Journals,
Portfolios, Learning Contracts
- Access
and manage information: Annotated
Bibliography, Guided Analysis,
WebQuest/Scavenger Hunt
- Demonstrate
knowledge and understanding: Exams,
Quizzes, Reports, Essays
- Design,
create, and perform: Projects,
Portfolios
- Communicate: Reports,
Journals, Essays, Oral presentations,
Role Plays, Debates, Discussions
Tip of
the Month: Working in Groups
Working in Groups is a very effective way
of learning and solving problems in both the f2f and online environment.
As a BGSU Online faculty member, it is important to know how to set up
and manage Groups for your own online classroom in Blackboard. Check out
this quicktime movie on how to create Groups in Blackboard. (movie
clip taken from the IDEAL online faculty training program)
Click
here to view the Quicktime movie on setting up a Group
in a Blackboard Course.
Online
Instructor Training
The internet
is a powerful tool but teaching online
is an art. Gain the confidence to master
the art of teaching online by participating
in this online workshop. An online
course is not a repository for information.
It is an interactive, collaborative,
and informative method of instruction.
Join your colleagues in learning how
to harness the power of online instruction
by participating in a 3 week online
workshop delivered via Blackboard and
facilitated by a distance learning
specialist. Just like most distance
courses, this course works around your
schedule rather than vice versa. The
best way to learn how to teach effectively
online is to first become a student
online. More info on this course below.
August
1st - August 19th: Three Week Online
Faculty Training program- Click
here to learn more and enroll in
the online training program or for more
information call 419-372-6843, or e-mail ideal@bgsu.edu
Face-to-Face
Instructor Training
Click
here to view face-to-face training
seminars and schedule for online course
design.
Q&A
with Featured BGSU Faculty Member: Dr. Paul Cesarini
1. What do you teach and how long have you been teaching
online?
It depends on how you define "online". I have been teaching and learning
with technology for over a decade now, and began integrating electronic communications
technologies into my courses back in 1999. These were comparatively primitive,
text-based MUD and MOO [multi-user domain] environments,
usually coupled with LAN-based chat clients and some external web links.
2. Why do you think teaching online is as effective as teaching
face to face? Don't the students need to be in a physical classroom
to learn?
Many times I teach both web-based and web-centric sections
of the same course, during the same semester. While the content is
similar, it needs to be tailored to different delivery mechanisms.
For example, presentations might be more visually-based for my face-to-face
sections, since I am there to provide additional context, but might
be more text-based for my web-based classes. Alternately, the web-based
classes allow me to explore different methods of communicating this
content with my students, including using the Digital Video Streaming
Server (DVSS) to store and stream some of my own audio or video content,
and even experimenting with newer methods such as podcasting.
3. You use a variety of media in your
online courses. What kind of multimedia do
you use and how does it enhance the students'
experience and learning retention?
The best approach I've found is a "shotgun
method" of having a variety of different
types of content accessible to my students.
This includes PDF-based handouts, PowerPoint
files with images, text, and external links,
numerous online articles, externally-streamed
audio and video clips, internally-streamed
audio and video clips, extensive group discussion
forums, occasional hardcopy texts, and infrequent
virtual classroom chats.
4. What do you think the major differences
are between a poorly designed and facilitated
online course and a course that has an excellent
instructional design and is facilitated properly?
Ultimately, people will have different
learning styles regardless of how effective or
ineffective a course is designed. Courses that
are 100% web-based, and well-organized, designed,
and moderated will likely have a great deal of
success. Yet, even then there will still be students
who feel too removed, overwhelmed, or otherwise
confused to continue. As optimistic as we'd all
like to be about it -- myself included -- distance
education can be a terrific tool for teaching
and learning, but it is still not for everyone.
5. Assessment is a crucial component
of any learning environment. Do you think some methods of assessment
are more conducive to online education than others? Why? What are some
assessment methods you use in your online course?
No single approach can be a silver bullet for assessment in
web-based courses, so I again opt for a shotgun approach that involves
papers, exams, discussion forums, polls, virtual office hours in the
chat room, and frequent feedback and communication on my part throughout
the semester.
6. How do you deal with copyright
issues online? What would you recommend to faculty who are using materials,
including multi-media online that are not their own original works?
To say that it's complicated would be a colossal understatement.
BGSU is currently drafting a comprehensive fair use policy for copyright
materials used in face-to-face and web-based classes. Even when it is
completed, navigating that all-too-often blurred line that balances the
Copyright Act with the DMCA and the TEACH Act will still be somewhere
between difficult and frustrating for many faculty.
In terms of what I would recommend to faculty in this regard, I would suggest
all faculty consider joining and supporting "digital rights" groups
like the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the Center for Democracy & Technology
(CDT), the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), DigitalConsumer.org,
and others. I'd also recommend faculty support legislation that will promote
a fair and flexible use of digital media, such as the proposed Digital Media
Consumer Rights Act (DMCRA). I'd also suggest that every single faculty member
in every discipline across campus subscribe to WIRED, Technology Review, and
Mobile.
Further, I would suggest all faculty read News.com, Slashdot.org, Wired.com,
Techweb.com, the Sci-Tech section of Google News, technology-related articles
from the Chronicle of Higher Education, and possibly The Register and Information
Week on a daily basis. Then, I'd recommend every faculty member read the Benton.org
Communications-related Headlines each morning, and perhaps a few others. I
read all this, every single day, and I'm still just barely able to comprehend
how this ongoing transition to digital will impact teaching and learning. This
daily ritual has become both invaluable and unnerving for me, in that the more
I read about issues in this area, the more I become aware of how little I actually
know and consequently how much more I need to become involved and informed.
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