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Chat Sessions in an Asynchonous Environment: Should They Be Mandatory

In my current position of instructing, we teach in an accelerated, asynchronous environment. Included in the courses are "live chat" sessions. Student can attend the true, live chat session on its presentation day or choose to access and review the archive of the session at their leisure 24/7 within the weekly parameters for a given topic. I have found that few people attend the live chat session at its initial taping. I have experimented with various times and days to hold these sessions, but never have more than 20% of a given class attend. All of the student must either attend the live chat or review the archive because there is an assignment associated with each live chat. The questions is: Should one or more of these sessions be mandatory? This is a difficult question because there are pro and cons on both sides. AS the instructor, it can be disheartening to give a "lecture" with so few in attendance. On the other hand, one of the primary reasons students take an online, asynchronous course is for its flexible schedule. What do you think? Raymond Lombardi

Engaging Learner

With today's technology, online instructor can leverage both synchronous and asynchronous technology to engage with students through live chat session as well as forums. Matt

Projecting Your Presence

Online instructor can effectively leverage technology such as live chat, and forum to engage with students on a daily basis. This is one thing that a physical class does NOT have. Matt

Rubrics

I admit that I hate rubrics. I am a very non-linear, intuitive grader and find that the linear nature of rubrics is very difficult for me. It's similar to the difference between cooking from a recipe or from scratch. You end up with the same result through two different methods.

Keeping Students Engaged

When I look at the online experiences that I have had in both the instructor and the student role, I truly believe that instructors providing quality and timely feedback is so important to students learning. What are some of the best ways to engage students and meet them where they are at?

Teaching Online

This can be a real sea change from teaching in the classroom. The needs and abilities of both the students and the instructor have to be different than teaching in the classroom. You almost have to reach another level to be successful in guiding the students through the material. You don't have the luxury of face to face interaction in this instance to help determine their level of understanding.

How the Course "Fits"

I believe it is important to consider how courses fit into the overall curriculum/program. Courses should not be taught in isolation and scaffolding happens not just within a course but obviously accross courses.

Rubrics

I find that rubrics are the best way to provide feedback. Rubrics provide a student with a clear understanding of their grade, in addition to the breakdown of their grade the instructor can also provide the student with specific feedback to the assignment that will support the rubric.

Evaluation of particiaption

I find that teachers who are passionate about their job want very robust communication that is student driven. But just as we all know students have different learning styles we must remember students have different communication styles as well. Not all students are outgoing, talkative people who will reveal their thoughts regularly. I find that this can be disappointing for teachers, myself included. It is helpful to maintain a realistic mindset when evaluating participation. This is not to say that if there is low level participation we should just chalk it up to all of our students being introverts, but this is to say that maintaining a realistic outlook on just how much participation to expect is healthy.

Common sense

It's not so common anymore. It's easy to take for granted what we have learned and how we learned it. To be able to take a step back and reflect, now that is a great teaching tool!!!

evaluation

I love the idea that the learning never stops, for the teachers to the student and the Company. When we lose sight of that, close the doors!!!

rubric

wow!! That was intense! I just got smarter and so will my students!! Thank you!

computer age

There is almost to much information on the web, ect. We can't possibly process it or comprehend. I really would like to fuse to the school and new school and find a center of gravity.

Will it make sense to the students?

In reviewing this module, I think the question that was posed: Will the course module make sense to the students? is probably the simplest and the most complicated of all. It is not easy to design courses that students can easily navigate and understand.

Fairness

Now this is an interesting topic. I would say this is one of the more difficult methods for grading. I know a lot of instructor’s grade on a Bell or some other method for evaluating assignments, but I don't use these methods. At the beginning of each quarter there is a detail questionnaire they fill out about their knowledge and experience in this subject being taught. Some students have been in this field for a long time, so I grade them at a higher level than do the students that have no experience in this field or subject. I also have found that some students are missing information that should have been taught at a lower class and for whatever reason were not. This also factors into my grading decisions. My problem is I only teach advance classes, so I never teach the lower and more basic classes. I would say this is where my frustration lies. Good effort is also an important criteria in grading. I current have a Telecom Manager in one of my Senior level Telecom courses. But she doesn't turn in great work. She knows her subject, but just lacks that extra effort to make her assignments really good. So this is downgraded. I have verbally spoken with her and she knows it and doesn't agree with me. Work is keeping her really busy, so her grades are being affected. These are my thoughts on fairness. By the way, when I make mistakes in my course and students do find them, I reward them (and I get these mistakes corrected ASAP). Fairness goes both ways and is a 50/50 proposition.

Technology

Using technology in online courses, are FANTASTIC! But you have to make sure that your students understand how to navigate and use the tools properly.

Online learning verses class onground learning

Online learning is very nessary for those who find it difficult to attend classes onground, for more reason than one, example if a mother just have a baby and wishes to continue her education staying home with her young child, she can always take classes on line, rather than taking classes onground, wher her mind could be wondering about child. Onground classes on the other hand is necessary for those who want to attend classes onground, where te students is allowed the oppertunity to counteract with both thier classmates,instructor and the environment.

Online Learning Preparation

When ever someone is doing online courses they must be prepared. Time management is of essence, and understanding the course outline is very important to follow.

Where do I start with this question???!!! :-)

Having taught in the virtual classroom that was merely on-ground content dumped into an online venue - the students, facilitators, and tech support personnel were more than frustrated!! Because on-ground content is designed with the understanding that the instructor will be seeing the student on a face-to-face daily basis, much information is not as clear as it should be made in the course content. This can be cleared up and expanded on inside the brick and mortar classroom. This becomes horrendous to deal with in the online venue! Online course content must be written and tailored to meet the type of instruction that will be delivered to have the best teaching possible!

4 pairs of shoes

To me, seems as if we are saying we are attempting to put ourselves in our student's shoes and attempt to meet the multiple variety of students we encounter in our classrooms. Not only are we meeting the student's needs in terms of their academic level, but we are attempting to create an understanding across cultural lines, other languages lines, as well as other issues the virtual environment brings into the classroom. Putting on different shoes allows us to best meet all the student challenges we encounter in the virtual environment we teach in.