Chris O'Neal LinoIt module

Setting the Stage (UC Davis hybrid workshop series)

Need windows open:
JOLT: Journal of Online Learning and Teaching
SmartSite: (I created a site for the workshop series in our LMS just as I would for a regular course, not because i love SmartSite above all else but because the faculty would be familiar with it)
CETL Workshop series
UW Milwaukee Hybrid Courses
D2L sites: Follow the steps on the UWM site to see their examples. Not perfect examples (the faculty in my workshop tore them apart) but they are working in current classes! Lots of steps to go through to get access to them, though.
Martyn article about good practice in hybrid courses (not the best because it is old, but it is what I had at the time)

Agenda*

Introductions**

Introduce self, project, and greatest triumph or failure in an online learning environment (as a learner or instructor)

Thanks for doing the survey. Results show that we collectively are a group of very experienced instructors, but mostly in the f2f environment. ** We have one or two who have taught fully online, a few who have taught blended, and one or two who have taught hybrid.** We have quite a range of experience with technologies, so please be patient if we are reviewing what for you are basics, and please ask if we are talking about tools and it sounds like wizards casting spells.

My own bias for course design: Blended learning brings together the best of online and face-to-face teaching, especially when the course is designed in its entirety before it is taught, rather than on an incremental basis. As a result of the substantial time commitment involved in designing a course, instructors may have a tendency to want to do so incrementally (one week at a time) and, sometimes, even as they are teaching the course. While being sensitive to time considerations, it is useful to point out that designing in this manner is likely to produce an undesirable and confusing experience for both the instructor and students.* Encourage participants to consider the following design strategies:

Holistic Course Design: After this week, we’ll spend most of the time working on your courses rather than discussing principles.

Their questions from the survey:

Tools that are intriguing:

* Creating coursework for 'non-traditional' students as well. Meaning, folks out of school.

What they want to accomplish:

* Getting a sense of the latest technologies for hybrid course development and delivery

Concerns:

* The possibility that technology might not be working on a particular day, the danger of "information overload" and the negative consequences of forced multi-tasking

Choose a platform: SmartSite or other website, where they will post content, reflections, where peers can review their work. Get it set up to start posting. (we didn't really do this as I had hoped)

Readings or homework:
Martyn
Find one in JOLT or another source http://jolt.merlot.org/pastissues.html