The Online Teaching Survival Guide: Simple and Practical Pedagogical Tips / Edition 2 available in Paperback

The Online Teaching Survival Guide: Simple and Practical Pedagogical Tips / Edition 2
- ISBN-10:
- 1119147689
- ISBN-13:
- 9781119147688
- Pub. Date:
- 09/19/2016
- Publisher:
- Wiley

The Online Teaching Survival Guide: Simple and Practical Pedagogical Tips / Edition 2
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Overview
Essential reading for online instructors, updated to cover new and emerging issues and technologies
The Online Teaching Survival Guide provides a robust overview of theory-based techniques for teaching online or technology-enhanced courses. Covering all aspects of online teaching, this book reviews the latest research in cognitive processing and related learning outcomes while retaining a focus on the practical. A simple framework of instructional strategies mapped across a four-phase timeline provides a concrete starting point for both new online teachers and experienced teachers designing or revamping an online course. Essential technologies are explored in their basic and expanded forms, and traditional pedagogy serves as the foundation for tips and practices customized for online learning. The tips cover course management, social presence, community building, integration of new technologies, discussion and questioning techniques, assessment, and debriefing, along with new coverage of intensive or accelerated courses, customizing learning strategies, developing expertise, advanced course design, and assessment techniques exclusive to this new second edition.
The theory and techniques of successful online teaching can be significantly different from those used face-to-face. With more and more classes being offered online, this book provides a valuable resource for taking your course to the next level.
- Understand the technology used in online teaching
- Learn specialized pedagogical tips and practices
- Examine new research on cognition and learning
- Adopt a clear framework of instructional strategies
The explosion of online learning has created a demand for great online teachers. Increasingly, faculty who normally teach face-to-face are being asked to cover online courses—yet comprehensive pedagogical resources are scarce. The learning curve is huge, and faculty need a practical approach to course design and management that can be quickly and easily implemented. The Online Teaching Survival Guide provides that essential resource, with a customizable framework and deeper exploration of effective online teaching.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781119147688 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Wiley |
Publication date: | 09/19/2016 |
Edition description: | 2nd ed. |
Pages: | 416 |
Product dimensions: | 8.50(w) x 10.80(h) x 0.80(d) |
About the Author
Rita-Marie Conrad is an experienced online educator, award-winning author, and digital learning strategist who has had the privilege of working at the University of California-Berkeley, Duke University and The Florida State University to help faculty strengthen their online programs and pedagogies. She is a frequent conference speaker and provides workshops on engaging digital learners.
Read an Excerpt
Table of Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Part One
Chapter 1: Teaching Online: The Big Picture
Preparing to Teach in the Online and Blended Environments
Oh, Oh. What Did I Say I Would Do?
Is This You?
The Definition of a Course
How Do Online and Blended Courses Differ from Traditional Courses?
Types of Online and Blended Courses
The Four Stages of a Course
Learning Theories and Theorists
Lev Vygotsky (1896–1934): Theory of Social Development
John Dewey (1859–1952): Experiential Learning
Jean Piaget (1896–1980): Theory of Genetic Epistemology or Origins of Thinking
Jerome Bruner (1915–): Constructivism
John Seely Brown (1940–): Cognitive Apprenticeship
Roger Schank (1946–): Schema Theory
Albert Bandura (1925–): Social Learning Theory
Jean Lave (1939–): Situated Learning Theory
K. Anders Ericsson (1946–): Expert Performance Theory
Ellen Langer (1947–): Theory of Mindful Learning
Daniel Goleman (1947–): Theory of Emotional Intelligence
Other Theorists and Influencers
Summary—And What’s Next
Chapter 2: Pedagogical Principles for Effective Teaching and Learning: Ten Core Learning Principles
Background of the Ten Core Learning Principles
Ten Core Learning Principles
Principle 1: Every Structured Learning Experience Has Four Elements with the Learner at the Center
Principle 2: Learners Bring Their Own Personalized and Customized Knowledge, Skills, and Attitudes to the Learning Experience
Principle 3: Faculty Mentors Are the Directors of the Learning Experience
Principle 4: All Learners Do Not Need to Learn All Course Content; All Learners Do Need to Learn the Core Concepts
Principle 5: Every Learning Experience Includes the Environment or Context in Which the Learner Interacts
Principle 6: Every Learner Has a Zone of Proximal Development That Defines the Space That a Learner Is Ready to Develop into Useful Knowledge
Principle 7: Concepts Are Not Words But Organized and Interconnected Knowledge Clusters
Principle 8: Different Instruction Is Required for Different Learning Outcomes
Principle 9: Everything Else Being Equal, More Time on Task Equals More Learning
Principle 10: We Shape Our Tools, and Our Tools Shape Us
Summary—and What’s Next”?
Chapter 3: Best Practices for Teaching Online: Ten Plus Four
Best Practices for Online and Blended Teaching and Learning
Best Practice 1: Be Present at Your Course
Three Types of Presence
Best Practice 2: Create a Supportive Online Course Community
Best Practice 3: Develop a Set of Explicit Workload and Communication Expectations for Your Learners and for Yourself
Best Practice 4: Use a Variety of Large Group, Small Group, and Individual Work Experiences
Best Practice 5: Use Synchronous and Asynchronous Activities
Best Practice 6: Ask for Informal Feedback Early in the Term
Best Practice 7: Prepare Discussion Posts That Invite Responses, Questions, Discussions, and Reflections
Best Practice 8: Think Digital for All Course Content
Best Practice 9: Combine Core Concept Learning with Customized and Personalized Learning
Best Practice 10: Plan a Good Closing and Wrap Activity for the Course
Four More Best Practices for Online and Blended Teaching and Learning
Best Practice 11: Assess as You Go by Gathering Evidences of Learning
Best Practice 12: Rigorously Connect Content to Core Concepts and Learning Outcomes
Best Practice 13: Develop and Use a Content Frame for the Course
Best Practice 14: Design Experiences to Help Learners Make Progress on Their Novice-to-Expert Journey
Conclusion
Summary—and What’s Next
Chapter 4: Technology Tools to Support Teaching and Learning
Guidelines for Choosing and Using Technology Tools
Guideline 1: Pedagogy First, Technology Second
Guideline 2: Keep It Simple
Guideline 3: Involve Your Learners in Choices and Use of Digital Tools and Resources
Guideline 4: Have Choices and Backups for When the Cloud Disappears
Guideline 5: Review Your Technology Tool Set Every Two to Three Years
Basic Set of Technology Tools for Online and Blended Teaching and Learning
Basic Set of Digital Technology Tools with Their Teaching and Learning Purposes
Communication Tools in the Learning Management System
More Thoughts on the Basic Tools
Tools for Practicing Contextual Knowledge and Exploring Possibilities
Staying in Sync with Tools
Chapter 5: Four Phases of a Course: Themes and Happenings
Phase 1, Course Beginnings: Starting Off on the Right Foot
Course Beginnings: Themes
What’s Happening in Course Beginnings
Phase 2, Early Middle: Keeping the Ball Rolling
Early Middle: Themes, Best Practices, and Principles
What’s Happening in the Early Middle
Phase 3, Late Middle: Letting Go of the Power
Late Middle: Themes, Best Practices, and Principles
Cognitive Presence
What’s Happening in the Late Middle
Phase 4, Closing Weeks: Pruning, Reflecting, and Wrapping Up
Closing Weeks: Themes, Best Practices, and Principles
What’s Happening in the Closing Weeks
Summary—and What’s Next
Part Two: Simple, Practical, and Pedagogically Based Tips
Chapter 6: Phase 1: Course Beginnings
Course Beginnings Tips
Tips for the Course Beginnings
Getting Started—Preparing Your Syllabus and Course Site
Getting Started—Launching Your Course
Creating and Designing Discussions
Getting Started—Preparing Your Syllabus and Course Site
CB Tip 1: Essential Elements of an Online or Blended Course Syllabus and Course Site
CB Tip 2: More on the Significant Elements of an Online or Blended Syllabus
CB Tip 3: Creating a Syllabus that Jump-Starts Learning
CB Tip 4: Using “Bookending” to Add Structure and Meaning to Your Course
CB Tip 5: Generating Energy and Purpose with Specific Learning Goals
Getting Started—Launching Your Course
CB Tip 6: Hitting the Ground Running: How Not to Lose the First Week
CB Tip 7: Launching Your Social and Cognitive Presence
CB Tip 8: Getting to Know Students’ Minds: The Vygotsky Zone of Proximal Development
CB Tip 9: Getting Into the Swing of a Course: Is There an Ideal Weekly Rhythm?
Creating and Managing Discussion Posts
CB Tip 10: The Why and How of Discussion Boards: Their Role in the Online Course
CB Tip 11: Characteristics of Good Discussion Questions
CB Tip 12: Power Questioning for Meaningful Discussions
CB Tip 13: Response Posts—A Three-Part Structure
CB Tip 14: Discussion Wraps: A Useful Cognitive Pattern or a Collection of Discrete Thoughts?
CB Tip 15: Managing and Evaluating Discussion Postings
CB Tip 16: Feedback in Discussion Posts—How Soon, How Much, and Wrapping Up
CB Tip 17: The Faculty Role in the First Weeks: Required and Recommended Actions
Summary—and What’s Next
Chapter 7: Phase 2: Keeping the Ball Rolling in the Early Middle
Tips for the Early Middle
Managing Your Course
Building Cognitive Presence
Strategies and Tools for Building Community
Managing Your Course
EM Tip 1: Tools for Teaching Presence: E-mail, Announcements, and Discussion Forums
E-mail, Announcements, and Discussion Forums
Text Messaging, Tweeting, and Whatever Short Messaging System Is Next
Making a Choice
EM Tip 2: Monitoring Student Progress Using Learning Management Systems
Monitoring Student Engagement and Progress
EM Tip 3: Early Feedback Loop from Learners to You
Using a Survey
Can Students’ Responses Be Anonymous?
EM Tip 4: Early Feedback Tools: Rubrics, Quizzes, and Peer Review
Rubrics
Quizzes
Peer Review
EM Tip 5: Steps in Memory-Making: What Teaching Behaviors Make a Difference
Using a Memory Process Model to Increase Learning
A Look at a Memory-Making Process Model
Teaching Strategies with the Memory-Making Model
Can Sleeping Help the Encoding of Memories?
Summary
EM Tip 6: Tips for Making Your Grading Time Efficient and Formative for Learners
How to Make Grading Pleasant, Fast, and Effective
A Checklist for Students
Conclusion
EM Tip 7: Dealing with Difficult Students—What Do You Do?
Types of Difficult Students
Unique Challenges of Difficult Students Online
Building Cognitive Presence
EM Tip 8: Building Cognitive Presence Using the Practical Inquiry Model
Striving for Cognitive Presence
EM Tip 9: Core Concepts of a Course—Do You Know Yours?
A Concept Is . . .
Conclusion
EM Tip 10: Designing Assessment Plans for Online and Blended Courses
Designing Assessment Plans
The Assessment Plan
A Three-Step Process for Developing Your Assessment Plan
An Assessment Plan That Is Distributed and Continuous
EM Tip 11: Three Best Assessment Practices
Best Practice in Assessment 1: Assess Across the Six Levels of Cognitive Skills of Bloom’s Taxonomy
Best Practice in Assessment 2: Assess the Core Concepts in Your Course
Best Practice in Assessment 3: Help Students Succeed on Assessment Tasks
Classic Resources on Assessment
EM Tip 12: Assignments for the Evaluating and Creating Levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy
Three Taxonomies—Cognitive, Affective, and Psychomotor
Evaluating and Creating—Cognitive Processes
What Does Evaluating Demand of Learners?
Example of Evaluating Assignment in a Leadership Course
What Does Creating Demand of Learners?
Examples of Creating Projects
Rubrics
Strategies and Tools for Building Community
EM Tip 13: Collaborating with Groups of Two or Three—Casual Grouping
Get Started on Teaming with Dyads and Triads
Start Casually!
Three Casual Grouping Opportunities
Ways of Pairing or Grouping Learners
Learning Power of Groups
EM Tip 14: Group Projects in Online Courses: Setting Up and Structuring Groups
Setting Up Group Projects
Additional Considerations for Setting Up Groups
A Note about Post-Millennial Students
EM Tip 15: Using Synchronous Collaboration Tools
Web Conferencing Tools
Mixing and Matching for Spontaneous and Customizable Instant Collaboration
EM Tip 16: Using Audio and Video Resources to Create a More Engaging Course
Strategies for Getting Started
Summary—And What’s Next
Chapter 8: Phase 3: Letting Go of Power in the Late Middle
Overview of Late Middle Tips
Going Deeper: Leveraging the Power of Questions
Feedback for Cognitive Growth
Assessing Learning as You Go with Projects
Community Empowerment and Social Networking
Going Deeper: Leveraging the Power of Questions
LM Tip 1: Questions and Answers: Upside Down and Inside Out
LM Tip 2: Three Techniques for Making Your Students’ Knowledge Visible
LM Tip 3: Developing Rigor in Our Questioning: Eight Intellectual Standards
LM Tip 4: Moving Beyond Knowledge Integration to Defining Problems and Finding Solutions
Feedback for Cognitive Growth
LM Tip 5: “Are You Reading My Postings? Do You Know Who I Am?” Simple Rules for Feedback in Online Learning
LM Tip 6: Feedback on Assignments: Being Timely and Efficient
LM TIP 7 Substantive Feedback: Doing It Wisely and Well
LM Tip 8: Rubrics for Analyzing Critical Thinking
Assessing Learning as You Go With Projects
LM Tip 9: Customizing and Personalizing Learning Projects
LM Tip 10: Managing and Facilitating Group Projects
LM Tip 11: Assessing Group Projects
LM Tip 12: Four Effective Practices During Project Time
Community Empowerment and Social Networking
LM Tip 13: Course Middles and Muddles: Souped-Up Conversations That Help Build Community
LM Tip 14: Using Social Networking Techniques to Build a Learning Community
LM Tip 15: Experts: A Touch of Spice
Summary—and What’s Next
Chapter 9: Phase 4: Pruning, Reflecting, and Wrapping Up
Tips for the Closing Weeks
Meaningful Projects and Presentations
Preparing for the Course Wrap
Meaningful Projects and Presentations
CW Tip 1: Using What-If Scenarios: Flexing Our Minds with Possibilities
CW Tip 2: Stage 3 of a Learning Community: Stimulating and Comfortable Camaraderie
CW Tip 3: Learners as Leaders
CW Tip 4: Course Wrapping with Concept Mapping: Capturing Course Content Meaningfully
CW Tip 5: Using Case Studies in Online Courses: Making Content Real
Preparing for the Course Wrap
CW Tip 6: Pausing, Reflecting, and Pruning Strategies
CW Tip 7: Closing Experiences: Wrapping Up a Course with Style
CW Tip 8: Real-Time Closing Gatherings: Stories and Suggestions
CW Tip 9: Debriefing Techniques: What One Change Would Students Recommend?
Conclusion—and What’s Next
Chapter 10: Teaching Accelerated Intensive Courses
Tips for Intensive Courses (IC)
IC Tip 1: Designing for Intensive Courses Using Content Framing and Case Studies
Design Strategy 1: Create a Visual Frame of the Core Concepts
Design Strategy 2: Place Case Studies with Consequences at Course Center
IC Tip 2: High-Impact Practices for Short Courses: Reflections, Patterns, and Relationships
Reflection Practices
What Places Are Good for Reflection?
Pattern Practices
IC Tip 3: Developing Expertise in Short Courses: Can It Be Done?
How Expert Resources Can Provide Deliberate Practice
What Does This Mean for My Course Assignments?
TED Conferences and Discussions: Ideas Worth Spreading
Background and Theory on Deliberate Practice
Conclusion—and What’s Next
Part Three
Chapter 11: What’s Next: Reflecting and Looking Forward
Reflecting and Looking Forward Using the Four Course Phases
Design and Preparation Phase
Reflecting on Phase 1, Course Beginnings
Reflecting on Phase 2, Early Middle
Reflecting on Phase 3, Late Middle
Reflecting on Phase 4, Closing Weeks
Reflecting and Looking Forward with the Learning Experiences Framework
Learner
Faculty Mentor
Content and Knowledge Resources and Goals
Environment and Context
Advice from Fellow Online Instructors
Advice 1: Just Do Your Best
Advice 2: It’s Kind of Fun to Do the Impossible!
Advice 3: Begin with the End in Mind
Advice 4: New to Online Teaching? Get to Know Your Students
Conclusion: Innovation as a Three-Phase Process
Index