Category Archives: Joyful Tidings

Joyful Tidings #40: The 10 + 4 of Online Teaching

via GIPHY

I know that we are all having tons of fun with Canvas right now, but I thought week two might be a good time to take a look at some ideas from a new addition to the PDP library: The Online Teaching Survival Guide: Simple and Practical Pedagogical Tips.​

Although the book targets beginning to intermediate level online instructors (I have no idea what that means — I have been teaching online in some form another for more than a decade and would still rate myself “beginning”), I have found this comprehensive overview a very useful tool for thinking about my own approaches, improving what I have, and developing new ideas. You can read a copy of the Table of Contents on the publisher’s page (just scroll down).

Discussing Some “Best Practices”

​The book is filled with interesting and useful resources, but this list of key principles struck me as a good starting point for thought and conversation among our joyful readership:

10+4 Best Practices for Online Teaching

I am hoping that some of you will share your thoughts with me in response to this list either via email or by commenting on the blog post version of this message.

​Possible Response Questions

Do you have a technique you use to implement one of these principles which you have found particularly effective?

Is there a practice here that you think is particularly important? Could you tell us why?

Is there a practice in here that you do not consider essential (or even productive). Could you tell us why?

Is there something else you would like to share that is three to four thousand times more interesting than any of these prompts?

Could you explain to your colleagues who invented liquid soap and why?

​By sharing your thoughts and reactions, you can help develop a conversation that we could all benefit from.

I Want, I Want!

PDP Library Loan

If you are thinking you would like to see this book for yourself, then you are welcome to drop by the PDP office where I will begrudgingly share it with you if you promise, promise, promise to bring it back really, really, really soon. I am thinking a one week borrowing period so others can see it too…

Save Us Library Heroes!

Our librarian super friends are working feverishly as I type this message to obtain an electronic copy of this Online Teaching Survival Guide that would be easier for us to share and / or share parts of. No pressure, super friends!

Buy Your Own Dang Copy

Of course, you can also grab a copy of your own Online Teaching Survival Guide at Amazon or some other website that is attempting to rule the world.

I have been having fun with the kindle version — which makes me feel very twenty-first century. But I actually catch myself spending more time reading the “hard copy” in the PDP office. This paradox makes sense if you remember that when I was a child we rode our dinosaurs to church on Sunday.

I look forward to reading your ideas and reactions to this message

Prepostero
PDP Coordinator

Joyful Tidings #39: Join a Sentipensante Conversation!

Edward and Maria leading a sentipensante conversation
Our First Sentipensante Worskhop

Thanks to the facilitating skill of Maria Figueroa, Edward Pohlert, and Denise Stephenson our campus-wide journey with Laura Rendon’s Sentipensante (feeling / thinking) Pedagogy began last Friday on the final day of flex week. As lively and engaging as that discussion was, it was still only a first step — a warm up. Here are three other ways to continue the journey:

Keep reading this amazing post ->

Joyful Tidings #38: The First Day Returns

Oprah celebrates the arrival of our students

The students return today and that means it is time for another First Day of Class Edition of Joyful Tidings!

On the Web

The web has a vast array of first day advice for college teachers. The most comprehensive I have found is Carnegie Mellon’s site: First Day of Class. Vanderbilt’s teaching and learning center also offers a comprehensive but slightly more condensed take on the first day of class.

Marilyn Weimer offers some specific activity suggestions in a faculty focus article about the first day. If you like a grab bag approach from which you can pick out one or two ideas among a hundred or so, the University of Nebraska’s 101 Things You Can Do In the First Three Weeks of Class might be useful.

Keep reading this amazing post ->

Joyful Tidings #35: Flex Week Is Here!

Jim and Debby Trying to Set Up the PDP Tent

Greetings MiraCostans!

Updated Calendar

​This is just a quick reminder that flex week begins tomorrow with ten flex workshops.

PDP has prepared a revised PDF calendar of our flex week events — please check it (see our Canvas home page) or myflex for any last minute changes (there have been several rooms adjustments and a few time / date shifts). It is always a good idea to double-check your workshop times one last time before heading out the door!

Keep reading this amazing post ->

Joyful Tidings #34: Teaching, Learning, and Flex Week

Sentipensante (image of book cover)Last semester, the Academic Senate chose Laura Rendon’s Sentipensante (Sensing / Thinking) Pedagogy as one of two shared faculty reads for the coming year.

I would like to begin our look at the relationship between flex week and our teaching and learning discussion by reminding everyone that reading Rendon’s book is a great way to earn flex credit on your own schedule while joining a campus-wide conversation.

Keep reading this amazing post ->

Joyful Tidings #33: Faculty Led Teaching and Learning Initiatives

a gathering of colleagues

 One Example

Not all initiatives originating outside our institution are hostile takeovers peddled by  the professional educational initiative industry. Often, MiraCosta College faculty discover great approaches to teaching and learning through their independent research and participation in discipline related conferences and networks. Then, working through their departments and in partnership with their deans, faculty initiate curricular and/or pedagogy change.

Keep reading this amazing post ->

Joyful Tidings #30: The Return of the Mailbag

image of open mail bag

The last few editions of Joyful Tidings have generated some interesting and illuminating responses . I am struck by the different cool ways people share. Some folks offer long reflections, some short. Some send me an email and some post to the blog. But everyone always contributes something interesting, something worth reflecting on, something that advances the conversation.

Keep reading this amazing post ->

Joyful Tidings #29 Active Learning and the Flipped Classroom

Marti Using Active Learning

In this message, I offer an extended look at the work one of our colleagues has been doing with active learning in her classrooms. I hope some of you will share your experiences with similar types of approaches (either as a teacher or a student) by responding to this email or visiting our Joyful Teaching blog (by the way, because it has so many images and is rather long, this message may well be easier to read on the blog).

Keep reading this amazing post ->

Joyful Tidings #27 Return of Discussions: Zoom Conversation and Jill Malone

I have two resources to share with you: 1) a video of our first Zoom Conversation: Discussing Discussions and 2) an amazing email about discussions I received from our wonderful colleague Jill Malone. If you have time for nothing else in this email today, please watch the video Jill included in her email — I am reasonably confident it will make you happy.

Conversation #1: Discussing Discussions

https://youtu.be/vYL_anCQd9I

We videotaped our first live Zoom Conversation about discussion strategies. You can view it here (and count your time for flex) or you can visit this resource in Canvas (on’t forget to enroll in our PDP canvas site on your way). Curry Mitchell and Lisa Lane have some very creative and effective insights into discussions to share with you; I hope you will visit with them when you have time.

Keep reading this amazing post ->