ITC eLearning 2016
http://www.itcnetwork.org/elearning-conference.html
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Key note: February 14, 2016
“Personalized learning should I care?”
Michael Feldstein
From Mind wires and Mindtap at Cengage
Gardner Hype Cycle
Personalized learning includes tutoring, contact time, and content
Homework time: contact time
Make class time more group time,
Let students learn from others, from each other, on their own
Presenter used a video presentation program called In the Telling: http://e-literate-tv.inthetelling.com
The idea of personalized learning is that it is personal. Something that might not matter to one student might make a huge impact on another student.
Case study of developmental math, such a wide range of students. Some failed because they were bored at start of class, some failed because they were not ready for some of the material.
They have three eighty minute labs a week, using adaptive software, so they work at the right level. They can ask questions of each other and of the instructor. Study skills lab as well as math skills.
Then 2 50 minute sessions focused on talking about how they learn, how to learn better, etc. Community building, accountability
School found problem, looked at a pedagogical solution, then found software to help solve it.
Turning homework time into contact time. Using data from their homework to inform what you do in the class, to work on what students need.
Doing it right
Identify student need
Design pedagogical structure
Select products and technology based on their ability to support pedagogy
Need faculty training
Need technical support
Be prepared to measure, fail, and iterate
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Key note Monday, Feb. 15
“Education in Abundance: Network Learning and Literacies”
Dr. Bonnie Stewart
From Charlottetown, PEI, university of PEI
Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/bonstewart/education-in-abundance-network-literacies-learning
She teaches new community college faculty how to teach. Many come from industry, maybe have not been in higher education themselves.
Education is shifting from closed to open practices, from public
Knowledge scarcity to knowledge abundance
Network behavior, how we think about tools shapes how we use them, same with education
What is literacy? Tools plus concepts.
Socrates riled against writing, thought the written word was a threat, would dumb down knowledge
1500 Gutenberg: now it’s about control. Who controls the knowledge? Not the church anymore. Literacy meant you had some control and were about to shape ideas of the time.
Now management and synthesis of knowledge. People need to be able find information, pick what they need, and be able to understand and use it
In England, there is a GIST? Seven elements of digital Literacies.
Media literacy, communication and collaboration, career and identity management, Ict literacy, learning skills, digital scholarship, information literacy
What Literacies are we good at? What do we need to work on.
Berlo in 1975 said we no longer have to memorize information. Education should be able how to handle information
Now we have abundance overload
Structure of abundance =networks
Networks are not just digital, families are networks, connections are still individual
Teaching has been a broadcast model, one to many, network tv
Abundance is the world’s largest small town
Educating in abundance is about networks
Hierarchy, wirearchy emergent network, allowing for different people talking to others, not through the proscribed hierarchy
Architecture of participation
Can’t just put content online
Literacy : Identity
Must have a digital identity, not all under your control, reputation built on repeated interactions online
Digital identity equals control
Need to work on your identity before it will work for you
Identity does not need to be totally public but should allow in group identification
Should scaffold and extend conversations and resource sharing
Hypothes_is
Shared annotation tools, they can create their own identity there
Can also use Twitter to have student interact
Should model how to navigate Twitter, to navigate many to many communications with minimal harm…
To get started in any network,
Orient
Declare
Network
Cluster
Focus
Takes about three months to make a habit
In your institution, need to choose what tools and networks you want to build
Literacy 2: contribution
Posting blogs, YouTube, Facebook postings, these are all contributions
Visitors and residents
David white Oxford
Where are your practices?
Which tools do you use? Do you use them personal or professional or a mix of both?
Which ones are you a resident and which are you a visitor?
If everything you are doing with students keeps them on the visitor side, then you are not maximizing their learning.
Students need to become residents of somewhere in order to contribute
Clout, gives a metric on how influential you are, and where you are influential
Networked leaning is learning with an audience
What you need to ask?
Support students to build real audiences for their work
Hashtags, allow us to find out other people who are doing things that interest us
Be the change that will help people navigate the change
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“Using Comic Life to create engaging content for students in online courses”
Joel Mellor
Instructional Designer at Kent State University
Comic life app: https://plasq.com/apps/comiclife/macwin/
Free trial version did not allow a long enough script
At first, it was $30
Had script, shot scenes with people
Took 40 hours to create graphic novel
This presenter has graphic design background
Look to see if Comic life has a tutorial to send faculty to.
Can export 300 dpi PDF
It is not screen reader ready. Could supply the script.
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“First hand accounts of Second Language Learners in an Online General Education Course”
Li-Lee Tunceren
St. Petersburg College
Community of inquiry framework (2001)
Teaching presence+
Social presence+
Cognitive presence =
Learning presence
framework evolved extended Picture and expands toon here on phone
Learning presence/ online self-regulated learning (osrl)
L2 second language
L2 can be seen as a deficit
Explicit instruction needed to advance Literacies within and across disciplines
Who is working on students’ writing and speaking skills beyond ESL and English classes?
She talks about pilot study in an online ethics class, no pre regs
Looked at what ELL students are doing? Are they using the skills they learned in ESL classes? No.
Asked about their perceptions on how things are going, three times
3 case study participants
Randomness of taking a course at large school. One professor might have things set up well for ELL learners, and others might not (such as timed, proctored tests)
More open assignments, less timed tests, but also need to give them time to work on their skills, reading and writing
Even when instructors have embedded librarians and tutors, students don’t always use those resources
Some possible conclusions, questions, etc. includes co requisites, ESL and comp I at the same time
Li-Lee contact
Tunceren.Lillien@SPCollege.edu
Skype. li-leet
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“Teaching with Glass”
Midlands Technical College
Diane Yeoman, Devin Henson, Barbara Mooneyhan
Students want to connect with their instructor
Want specific just-in-time videos
Putting faculty back in their natural habitat.
More like being in the classroom
Approachable, engaging, passionate, positive energy: qualities of great on ground teachers
Trying to replicate this.
65 percent of how effective a teacher communicates come from body language
Easy to implement
No studio
No custom equipment
No custom lights
Instructor can record alone
What you need:
White background
Glass board
Camera, web cam, action cam (not the best) a or DSLR camera (recommended) with remote
Microphone
Affordable
$60 webcam with stand
External microphone $100
Curtains behind camera $50
Glass board $ 100 to $300
Need software to turn image 180 degrees so the writing is not backwards
This though is trying to replicate the traditional lecture
Student feedback has been good. Students do like to see the instructor
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“Gamifying Your Syllabus”
Leslie Van Wolvelear
Oakton Communication College
Using D2L Brightspace
Problems. How do we get students to read and understand the syllabus?
If the students don’t understand the goal and the rules, they can’t really score…
Gamification:
Move through levels
Earn achievements or
Play to avoid losing points
Collaborative, work with others to achieve goals
Synthesis
Process where game mechanics are integrated into traditionally non game tasks.
Does Gamaification help students learn?
Steven Johnson says it depends
Gamification can help the middle students, 40 to 60 percent who aren’t the top or bottom performers
Syllabus scavenger hunt
Clear and concise instructions
HTML file in content
Use of images for visual learners
Links to D2L tools, discussions, quizzes, Dropbox, surveys, checklists, email
Gets them practice with LE tools too
Points for completing assignments
Piloted this in a F2F class In a computer lab
“Minds are like parachutes; they work best when open.” Thomas Dewar
Students get extra credit for finding the hidden Easter eggs, something hidden.
Made an image a hyperlink and they had to find the hyperlink
Get them to explore everything. Give students a sense of accomplishment and also teach them to persist.
Set up conditional release, so they need to click on syllabus before they can even see the scavenger hunt file
Steps of scavenger hunt
Send an email. Give them the actual words and model good emailing techniques
Post a question or answer a question on the discussion board. a question about content of the class.
All these materials are in the ITC app including the quiz
The Easter egg is an image link to a Dropbox assignment that asks about their study habits, how many hours they study and word, what their plans are for getting through the work in your class.
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Student panel from Rio Salado
Rio Salado college at the forefront of online learning, talk to them…. Have 4 Gate grants
Students like different kinds of assignments that allow students to show their personality. Presentations, interviews, not just essay questions
Students also like videos, puzzles, word games, etc.
They like things like mymathlab
Students like to be able to have the time, scaffolding, building on skills, remember this, now we will use that to go on and do this….
Connecting with the instructor, treating as an adult, especially non-traditional students, communication open, good feedback, positive and encouraging, motivating
Learning about yourself
Instructor engagement, communication, connection, individual attention
Student services important. Advising, bookstore, counsellors, disabilities services, financial aid, getting involved in student life, help with resumes and letters of application, student tech center, transfer help, and tutoring, especially in math and science
Challenges: time management, learning what time works best (whether to work in the morning, etc.); timed essay tests can be challenging
Non-traditional: gap between educational experiences intimidating, also balancing work and school
Learn to plan time out, work several days even if all assignments are due on one day
Remember that online course does not equal easy class, treat it like a F2f class
Getting involved in student life, stepping away from the computer
Tips for new online students
Remind yourself, use sticky notes, phone to stay on track, remember to work, figure out what times works best for you
Can go at your own pace. In some classes, you can work ahead.
Give yourself time, prepare. Go at your own pace at the start. Make sure you have all your college stuff set up so that is a not a stressor. Financial aid, books, etc.
Set reminders in phone and Google to remind you to work, or separate alarm clock or dry erase board to write down all the things that are due
Take a college success course
Don’t procrastinate
Back up everything you do
Know what free materials are out there, especially software
Keep your books
Stay in contact with your instructors
Start slow. Lots of reading, takes a lot of time. See how it goes.
Get to know advisors and student services
Ask questions, anything
Being active in your own learning. Not just passively sitting and getting the info
Ideas. Have video and have students record short audio response, or short summary
Students want most from their instructors: communication and passion for the subject
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“Animated, authentic, accessible, and free: using video in online courses”
Anne Marie Anderson and Melanie Morris
Raritan Valley Community College
Students react to authentic, instructor made videos
Why video?
Personalize classes
Live instruction
Can use it to flip classes or hybrid
Re watch and review concepts
For feedback and assignments
Universal design
Fits different learning styles, not everyone learns best through reading and writing, some through watching and hearing
Tools
Screen capture
Screencast o matic. Free
Cantata
Jing
Editing and drawing tools
Bamboo tablet
Live scribe
Smoothdraw3
Make videos
Go animate. For schools, free version
POWtoon
Windows moviemaker or iMovie
Use existing videos
Khan academy
YouTube
TEDed
Can have students create videos, 4 to 7 minutes, in groups
Alternatives to papers, use video to teach or explain concepts and interpret
Use YouTube because it’s free and accessible
How to transcribe other people’s videos in YouTube:
Click on MORE, transcript, highlight text, and copy and paste it into a file.
Putting it all together using TedeD
Let students connect the content to their interests
Can add info into TedeD, activities, etc. can engage with other classes
More on this session: http://mevins.info/1onfuyN
HTTPS:// t.co/on6WopVxcj
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“Avoiding the Zombie Apocalypse”
Beth Ritter-Guth
Union County College
Universal design in the sense that it makes the materials better for all the class, and can students manipulate them, and submit them in different ways
Tool #1
EdPuzzle
Can add questions right in videos and they have to answer the questions to go on. The answers go to the grade book
Can organize it into classes. Students can make videos too. There is a project portal.
You can add audio comments over the video
Students need to create an account and send you their username. Given them points for that. They should not use first and last names. They can create their own name.
If the video you use is taken off YouTube, it goes away from EdPuzzle too although the grades still remain.
Can clip the videos too so you don’t have to ask them to watch the whole thing
#2 Tool
ThingLink
Can give students a picture and have them tag it, do the research
They have to come up with five links
Can have them label anatomy, etc. maybe have them annotate a poem for sound techniques?
How to get image from Google without violating copyright
Search for image, go to search tools
Go to advanced settings
Filter by license
Free to use even commercially
Save it
Then you can upload it to ThingLink
Can put a link or have students out their source there
Save a tag, have them out them as many tags as
Then share by embedding it
They have to create an account, can be the same as the EdPuzzle
Read speaker will read it, including the image text and tags
Tool#3
Flip grid
Need to have a Camera
60 seconds to talk and they have 60 seconds to respond
This would be great for some ideas about poetry
More on this session: HTTPS://t.co/7lpaupB41M
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“Using Virtual Presentations
To connect your students with content and each other”
Joan J OSborne
Northern Virginia CC. NOVA
Why have students do presentations?
Promote participation
Collaborate, create, and share
Social learning
Use class time for quality discourse
This applies to any mode of teaching, f2f, online and hybrid
Things to Consider
Planning is critical
Dr. Smith Budhai Link to article in presentation materials
4 Steps to planning
Leveraging Google apps
They could use google slides, Google hangout and google chat
This project is used in a faculty training class, trying to teach teachers how to use technology to engage students and to select tools that are useful for their discipline
First students need to work alone, doing some research
Go to blogs about teaching and technologies
Present on tools they think they could use in their classes
Do a discussion about ten or more tools that they are excited about. Narrow down to two or three technologies which they research more in depth! Then they present these to the class with resources on how to use the tools and how.
Other tools
slideshare, voice thread, knovio, present.me, screen cast o magic. Mobile app, explain everything
7 x 7 rule. No more than 7 bullets, not more than 7 words per item in the list
The project is a week and then another week for review and discourse
Will give example of great presentation by English instructors!
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Mega byte session
“Online training for online teachers:
A self faced faculty training course”
Chelsey Brokmann and Kathy Hanselman
University of Nevada, Reno
The instructional designer and a team does all the work; it’s their design and must be approved
They have a best practice course
Must be completed by faculty before they start developing class
Get $500 for completing a class
Faculty also get money for putting a course online
Class replicates what it’s like a class looks like, template of what their courses will look like, gives them the student experience
Four learning modules, syllabus same structure and color
Syllabus
Learning modules
Grades and assessments
Teaching your class
Each module is the same
Overview
Readings and resources
Lecture materials
Assignment and discussion
Instructors could get through it in a weekend but they usually take much longer
Have templates and examples from past instructors
Materials are on the APP
First assignment is to complete a draft syllabus
Second is to design and submit your week 1 module
Module three assessments and grading, the assignment is to create a quiz or take a quiz?
Module 4 about communication and using video, assignment is create an intro video
All about instructor presence, personalize the class
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“Effective Online Grading”
Joe Safdie and Gwyn Enright
San Diego Community college district
Second largest community college system in California
Link to checklist of competencies for effective online teaching, SDCCD online learning pathways
They are talking about equivalent to Comp II, critical argumentative expository writing
What’s my grade?
No late assignments or make up tests because there are so many assessments
Look at assignment for looking at parts of an argument and rubric. Find an argument, trashier the better, video even better
Look at parts of the argument and comment on It
Could give audio feedback too.
Maybe have a short video to show students how to access all. The feedback
Flipped assessment. Positive feedback
Student create rubrics
Have students demonstrate what they learned in assignments
Grade with students in conferences
Can use video to give general feedback on papers. Tool for audio to text transcription, need to be ADA compliant if giving audio or video feedback
More from Matt Evins: Mevins.info/24aivCT
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“Creating an Online Learning Community”
PIMAOnline
Teach. Build, lead.
Based on the level of training, all faculty get privileges even adjunct. Incentives are for what they can get or do once they complete the training.
Level One.
Through office of professional development, faculty can sign up for course, D2L Teach, TE 125
Must pass with 80% to be TEACH certified and to go on to the next level
Modeling a good online course and give faculty the student experience. 15 great instructors help put it together
They do have emergency certification pathway if they need someone to teach an online class right away but they will need to go back and take it. Faculty who have been teaching online before this were grandfathered in, but they are encouraged to take it.
5 weeks, pilot 20 registered, 7 never participated, 2 left after the second module 9 passed,
Incentives, faculty who have been through BUILD will have priority in being assigned classes for part time instructors
State of Arizona gives no money to these community colleges
Level two:
BUILD TE 150, 4 weeks
Contact Anthony Sovak and Michael Amick at Pima for more info
15 people who helped create course, brainstorming what they wished they had known or learned… This is what someone needs to know if order to be a good online teacher
Will send out link on Twitter
@asovak
TOOLS and Other links:
Note anywhere, chrome extension that lets you add notes to webpages and aggregate later
Tools screen leap, instant scree sharing
IFTTT. pronounced gift without the g
Text Expander. App that allows shortcuts for adding text, comments
Cool tools work smarter not harder
Student who take out loans for 4 year degree $100 per textbook over 30 years will be $23,000
Look at how students get help in online course. HTTPS:// t.co/YgWolgVyvF
Write 6×6 program from @soul4real https://t.co/sQhpOc6sk
Wall of videos for teaching best practices https://t.co/8YWaEtK2m
9x9x25 challenge https://t.co/BUL2xFDpWL
Todd Conaway
Kari. https://t.co/b12MxBF3be
Mindtap
Mindmeister.
Amara, allows you to add subtitles
Mobile apps voice thread and explain everything
Crossroads. Where technology and pedagogy meet
Map for the 21st century educator
Adventures in Video: Connecting with Online Students Through Camtasia
Canvas as the Next Generation LMS
Tool to look at. mevins.info/216PzJE
9x9x25 challenge mevins.info/20zlYoO
http://evinsmj.net/blog/2016/02/9x9x25-challenge/
Cool Tools: Work Smarter, Not Harder
http://evinsmj.net/blog/2016/02/cool-tools-work-smarter-not-harder/
Resources mevins.info/1SsonU8
kEynote. mevins.info/1Kl7SXt
Seven elements of digital literacy mevins.info/1QhtzE2
Pre-conference: http://evinsmj.net/blog/2016/02/pre-conference-workshop-instructional-fun-tools-that-tantilize/