reverse engineering the online classroom

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+ Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom Ann H. Taylor Director, Dutton e-Education Institute Penn State University This presentation is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License

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Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom. Ann H. Taylor Director, Dutton e-Education Institute Penn State University This presentation is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Where do we begin?. This is a chance to rethink your course! - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

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Reverse Engineering the Online ClassroomAnn H. TaylorDirector, Dutton e-Education InstitutePenn State University

This presentation is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0Unported License

Page 2: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Where do we begin?

This is a chance to rethink your course!

Most faculty start by selecting a textbook

If my colleagues and I all use the same textbook,

what am I adding to this class?

A better way: Know where you are going, then reverse engineer!

Outcomes Assessments Learning Resources

Page 3: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Step 1:Identify Learning Outcomes

Why? Learning outcomes provide: Students with a target and motivation for learning,

plus a basis for self-assessment Faculty with a focus for course design

Your starting point: Where do you want your students to end up?

Think “performance”—What should your students be able to… Know? Do? Feel?

Page 4: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Learning Outcomes:Practice, Practice, Practice!

Is it clear to others what is expected?

How would you measure it?

Are you reaching for a wide range of skills and knowledge? Cognitive Affective Psychomotor

Page 5: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Learning Outcomes: Poor Examples

Demonstrate to students how to set up laboratory equipment

Explain to students how to calculate a quadratic equation

Understand addition is commutative and demonstrate with turn-around facts

Understand the inverse relationship between addition and subtraction

Demonstrate knowledge of the team process

Develop an appreciation of music

Page 6: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Learning Outcomes: Good Examples

Cognitive

Affective

Psychomotor

Page 7: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Learning Outcomes:The Cognitive Domain

Remembering: Can the student recall or remember the information?

Understanding: Can the student explain ideas or concepts?

Applying: Can the student use the information in a new way?

Analyzing: Can the student distinguish between the different parts?

Evaluating: Can the student justify a stand or decision?

Creating: Can the student create new product or point of view?

Source: http://ww2.odu.edu/educ/roverbau/Bloom/blooms_taxonomy.htm

Page 8: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Source: http://www.schrockguide.net/bloomin-apps.html

Page 9: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Getting Started: Action Verbs!

Page 10: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Step 2:Determine Assessments

What ARE “assessments”?Tools you use to determine how far a student has come in reaching a desired learning outcome

Assessments should directly link to learning outcomes

The tool should match the job

Might need to adapt yourassessment for a distant audience!

Page 11: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+When and How to Assess

WHEN

Formative vs. Summative

Informally vs. Formally

HOW

What tasks make sense for the learning outcome?

How will the assessment be scored?

What evaluation criteria and standards will you use?

Page 12: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+The Rubric – An Assessor’s Best Friend!

Scoring guide

Details the criteria that will be used to evaluate performance

Helps focus teaching

Helps ensure consistency in evaluation

Communicates expectations to students

Provides students with a means for self-check

Primary types: Holistic and Analytical

Page 13: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Holistic

http://www.temple.edu/tlc/resources/handouts/grading/Holistic%20Critical%20Thinking%20Scoring%20Rubric.v2.pdf

Page 14: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Analytic

http://www.uwstout.edu/soe/profdev/upload/Reflection-Journal-Rubric.doc

Page 15: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Potential Issues When Assessing Online

Some things never change: Cheating Plagiarism Late or dog-eaten homework

Technology failure

Lack of access to needed resources

Submitting work, sharing feedback File size, file transfer File formats Alternatives to “writing in the margins”

Page 16: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Step 3: Teaching and Learning

Now that you know where you are headed, how will you get there?

What do you need to teach?

What do your students need to experience?

What kinds of practice will they need en route?

How will you do this all online??

Page 17: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Text-first Teaching

Glitzy ≠ Quality

Use media when/where appropriate

Chunk!

Watch tone

Watch idioms and culture-specific references

Page 18: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Step 4: Obtaining Resources

What do you already have?

What do you need?

DIY? Existing?

Required vs. Supplemental

Primary vs. Remediation

Page 20: Reverse Engineering the Online Classroom

+Questions?