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Developing Teaching Presence in Virtual Learning SpacesMoodle Moot5 May 2011Edmonton, Alberta

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Developing Teaching Presence in Virtual Learning Spaces

Mary M. Pringle, PhD

Learning Designer

Athabasca University

Teaching Presence

The Community of Inquiry Model

http://communitiesofinquiry.com/model

Garrison, D.R., Anderson, T., & Archer, W. (2000). Critical inquiry in a text-based environment: Computer conferencing in higher education. The Internet and Higher Education, 2(2–3), 87–105. pdf Full Text

Teaching Presence

• Social presence is “the ability of participants to identify with the community (e.g., course of study), communicate purposefully in a trusting environment, and develop inter-personal relationships by way of projecting their individual personalities.” (Garrison, 2009)

Teaching Presence

• Teaching presence  is the design, facilitation, and direction of cognitive and social processes for the purpose of realizing personally meaningful and educationally worthwhile learning outcomes (Anderson, Rourke, Garrison, & Archer, 2001).

Teaching Presence

• Cognitive presence is the extent to which learners are able to construct and confirm meaning through sustained reflection and discourse (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2001).

Teaching Presence

For under-prepared undergraduates:

Somebody is there and somebody cares!

Categories• Design and organization• Facilitating discourse• Direct instruction

(Anderson et al., 2001)• Instructor persona

Teaching Presence

Instructor Persona

• The social presence of the teacher

• Have a profile photo

• Try YouTube, e.g., http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H7h1dS_94wE

• Commit to frequent appearances

Instructor Persona

• Use the Online Users block so that students can see when you are there.

• It’s important to establish a teaching presence right at the beginning of the course.

Instructor PersonaI send out a message on the first day reminding students to start the course and telling them what they need to do to succeed.

Instructor Persona

Personal Voice• ‘You’ rather than ‘the students’ in instructions.• Acknowledge their busyness while

broadcasting deadlines.• Let them know what is negotiable.• Messages versus Internalmail, etc.

• Simplicity: the greatest design challenge• Pre-empt confusion• Continuous orientation

Design and Organization

Simplicity• Less is more.• Keep it simple.

Design and Organization

Design and Organization

Pre-empt Confusion• Anticipate problems.

• Edit carefully to avoid conflicting or confusing instructions.

• Avoiding conflicting information about requirements and deadlines saves you work in the long run.

Design and Organization

Pre-empt Confusion• Comment on anything potentially confusing,

for example:

“Week 5 has a mixture of activities—this is a moment in the course where various streams come together in preparation for the major essay project.”

Design and Organization

Pre-empt Confusion• If you have to make a change during the

course, no matter how small, send a message to alert students.

Design and Organization

Continuous Orientation• Continuous orientation (reminders) may help

to decrease attrition rate.

• Especially important for big assignments due later in the course.

Design and Organization

Facilitating Discourse

• Different for undergraduates and graduates.

• Weekly graded discussion topics to foster critical thinking.

• Provide guiding questions.• Provide reliable feedback.• Explain your grading.

Facilitating Discourse

Responses should be at least 250 words long in total. Each discussion is worth up to 20 points—the total discussion points can make a difference of a letter grade!

Common reasons for getting less than full points include

• posting less than 250 words.

• spelling errors.

• failure to answer at least one of the discussion questions.

• failure to respond to a peer posting (automatic deduction of 5 points).

• failure to meet posting deadlines.

• ignoring the content of the assigned readings and lecture notes.

Facilitating Discourse

• Use the settings in the Moodle forum to meet your needs in a given course.

• For example, you can set up the forum so that you can rate posts and they will go into the grade book.

• You can use the Q and A forum to make students post their response before they can see others’.

Rating forum postings.

Facilitating Discourse

• Be sure to subscribe to all your discussion forums so that you get an email alert whenever a student posts.

• If it’s too annoying, use an email filter, but don’t ignore them!

• Respond on a predictable basis.

Direct Instruction

• Course notes and commentaries

• Feedback on assignments

• Feedback on quizzes

• Feedback on forums

Direct Instruction

Feedback on Assignments• There are at least two places you can give

students feedback when you grade assignments: – on the uploaded document and – in the assignment textbox.

Direct Instruction

• Using Track Changes on the uploaded document. If you ask students to upload completed work as a Word file, you can use Track Changes as well as embedded comments to give students feedback:

Direct Instruction

• Here is something the student has [written]  in response to a an assignment. Here is a tracked change with feedback.

• Note that the keyboard shortcut to turn Track Changes on and off is Ctrl + Shift + e. If you accidentally change some of the characters doing this, you can restore the original keyboard by hitting Ctrl + Shift twice.

Here is a comment suggesting a link for more help: http://www.help

Direct Instruction

The Helpful Links page—use it to paste links that address common problems.

Here is a comment suggesting a link for more help: http://www.help

Direct Instruction

Assignment feedback pop-up.

Direct Instruction

Student view of the grade book.

Direct Instruction

Assignment feedback using quick grading.

Direct Instruction

• Detailed feedback can be highly effective in practice quizzes where you anticipate the typical errors and give feedback for each incorrect answer accordingly.

• Humour is always welcome and motivating.

• See examples at http://www2.athabascau.ca/services/write-site/paragraph-resource/

Good Practice

• Contact non-attending students• Weekly grading/performance feedback• Mid-point performance evaluation• 24- to 48-hour response time• Detailed and insightful feedback to student

assignments, quizzes, and discussion posts

Teaching Presence

Questions?

maryp@athabascau.ca

Teaching Presence

References

Anderson, T., Rourke, L., Garrison, D.R, & Archer, W. (2001). Assessing teaching presence in a computer conferencing context. JALN, 5(2).

Garrison, D.R. (2009). Blended learning as a transformative design approach. In Encyclopedia of distance learning (2nd ed.), pp. 200–204. IGI Global.

Teaching Presence

References (cont.)Garrison, D.R., Anderson, T., & Archer, W. (2001). Critical thinking, cognitive presence, and computer conferencing in distance education.

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