Category Archives: Online Teaching

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 #26: Discussing Discussions

Greetings Friends:

I come to you today in yet another pathetically transparent attempt to encourage us all to chat a bit about teaching and learning at our college.

I know, I know, it is week eight! What is wrong with me!

But week eight is just the right time for some rejuvenation — just the right time to bring that pulse of energy back into our onsite or online classes with a new discussion technique for your bag of tricks.

You may even find yourself injecting discussion leadership strategies into some of your meetings (they worked for me when I was on jury duty).

And every one of us — staff and faculty — has experienced discussions both enthralling and stultifying. We all have opinions, ideas, and tips to share.

Not surprisingly, we are not alone in our interest in this topic. And during this week-long celebration of discussion (wait…what?!), I will be sharing web sites, and books, and other tools we can use to sharpen, expand, reinvent, renew, restore, recalibrate and otherwise transform our discussion skill set.

Continue reading this amazing post ->

Joyful Tidings 17: Sharing First Day Ideas

Last week, I sent out a friendly email celebrating the arrival of our new students and calling on colleagues to share their ideas about first day strategies that work.

Six of them very kindly did so: dara, Rick Cassoni, Lisa Fast, Louisa Moon, Chad Tsuyuki, and Marti Klein. Thank you so much to each of you. I have included everything they shared below in this email, but in case you lose this inspiring email, you can always find it forever archived on our joyful teaching blog.

Keep reading this amazing post

Joyful Tidings #3: All Things Canvas

Greetings Colleagues:

I imagine that many of you, like me, are working through the transition to Canvas in some way this summer: whether it is moving a course or two, starting a new course, or refining sections you have already experimented with before. This image is of an old scratch sheet I used to think about how I wanted to “bend canvas to my will” by making sure that my pedagogical strategies drove my use of Canvas (rather than the the other way around!).

Keep reading this amazing post

Lisa’s Dozen Tips for Canvas

Now that I’ve experienced Canvas conversion  (including full immersion if not a blinding experience of insight), I offer my tips:

1) Use the calendar, even if just for you

The calendar is drag and drop. You can leave everything without a due date, then set them in the Calendar by opening up the “undated” items menu on the right, and drag them in. Default due time is 11:59 pm, but you can change it.

Keep reading this amazing post

Joyful Tidings #2: Technology, Community, and Teaching Naked

“Instant access to knowledge and to each other has changed the nature of community and the speed of work, life, and, most importantly, thought. Time for reflection and interaction is a casualty of the digital age, and one of the primary goals of higher education should be to reclaim this time. The paradox is that the same technology that glues us to flat screens can also be the primary tool for reclaiming this lost time for human interaction. The ability to reach our students wherever they are means that we can extend the classroom and hence the conversation; we can recreate the ideal of students discussing Plato in the dining hall, but virtually.”

Jose Antonio Bowen, page 27-28
Teaching Naked: How Moving Technology Out of Your College Classroom Will Improve Student Learning
Jossey-Bass 2012

A Conversation Starter

I thought it would be fun to share some quotes from books available in our PDP library as a regular feature in our Joyful Tidings emails.

Keep reading this amazing post