Thursday, July 24, 2008

Taking a Stand

I confess, I am not naturally one to take a stand publicly... hence some discomfort arises for me as I write this blog. Today, I go out on a limb a little bit.

My stand today is the curmudgeonly one... I wonder what happened to the initiatives we adapted the College of Education over the last few years. I wonder what's going to happen with the writing rubric we developed a couple years ago. How are we using the Learning-Centric Education Model that we adapted last year?

Several faculty members did a great deal of work developing the writing rubric. It would be a great little research project to assess how it's being implemented and its effectiveness. Heck, we could use the Learner-Centric Education Model to look at the state of our writing initiative. It would be good to see the Learner-Centric Education Model in action. How are we addressing the issues of metacognition, dialogue, scaffolding for differentiation, and data-informed decision making as we look at our writing initiative? Maybe a great deal is going on and I just missed it somehow. Looks like I have some questions to ask.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Distance Ed Presentations

Today we held 2 meetings of faculty who have worked on their distance ed classes over the summer. Great stuff all around. I see advances in comfort with technology. I see experimenting. I see people actually incorporating the suggestions that Teresa and I made.

There is interest in the following tech sessions:
-Jeopardy in Elive
-audacity
-application sharing tips and tricks
-images and sound in powerpoint
-learning objects

People derive great value from the sharing. I wonder how to foster ongoing sessions. I could ask individuals to present on a topic... so it isn't me always presenting. I could have meetings around a given theme... maybe seeded with some presenters.

Sheila had a great shell she build for Early Childhood Special Ed that is for advising them. Students enrolled in her program are automatically enrolled in her shell. I asked about creating a generic account that she could give to prospective students to log in and check out the shell.

Cleo shared an example of students developing a shared understanding of division of decimals together in Elive. In this instance, students were able to collaborate together and learn better than they could of in a face-to-face class. This was an epiphany for her.

Sunny created Powerpoint templates to use in her class that take advantage of the whiteboard to increase interactivity. She took all this away from the Interactivity in Elluminate session at our May workshop.

Susan developed a great newsletter to succinctly advertiser her course. It included her learning objectives, class dates, etc. It's much more alluring that the NCATE boilerplate syllabus. I think it was Deb that created a learning unit for her syllabus- it was 10 pages long, and easy to navigate to the topic of interest.

Several instructors reported that students would like a more standard Blackboard shell across their courses. They have to learn the idiosyncrasies of each instructor's organization. This is an issue worth bringing to the Leadership Team.

I see that we are focusing well on design and delivery. This is the easy point of entry. We still need work, I think on the enduring understandings and learning objectives. For that matter, we still need work on on design and delivery, but it's come a long way.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Thoughts for Tuesday

It's my second day back at the office. I liked sliding back into work slowly by working at home last week. Getting caught up what's been going on, sharing my pictures of Italy, thinking about new projects.

Talked with Pat about Learning Town Network and how they send out regular emails to encourage discussion on topics ranging from "to scroll or not to scroll" to issues around inducting new people to an organization - the new term is "onboarding". I was lured in to check out what's going on. There's got to be value-added and a lure to get folks to want to visit a network. And even though I get 2-3 emails per week from Learning Town, they don't bug me.

As we look at the AEIN Network, I can see the advantage to the continuing invitations extended by Elliot at Learning Town.

Pat is working on a presentation for AERA on Network Learning. A concept she told me about today from the NCSL folks in Britain is the idea of "brokering" for a group rather than facilitating. When one brokers, one helps find resources. I like it.

Friday, July 18, 2008

Student Services Online

I've been reading the chapter on call centers in distance education in Terry Anderson's recently updated The Theory and Practice of Online Learning. As we've developed our online offerings in the College of Education, I'm not sure how much we've developed systems for tracking and supporting online students. I think each of our programs has its own contact point. We have information on the web, but I am not sure how complete it is on the web and how easy it is to access.

Lastly, I wonder if we are logging the contacts made by students to see the distribution of questions. We could start developing knowledge about the systems and figuring out ways to improve services and perhaps reduce staff time for these important tasks.

What can I do? I can ask questions. Maybe share the chapter from the book.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Back to Work

Watching a video of Dan Roam talking at Google about his book Back of the Napkin. It's about using visuals to solve problems in business. I like the concept. Can we apply it to teaching? To the extent that learning is about solving problems, one can do an overlay of the concept on to education. Creating visuals can be a powerful way to create/share meaning.I find that I want to share things with faculty ... this video of Dan Roam is one of them.