Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Speaking in an Online Language Class

I have been spending more time than I hoped, designing one of my courses for a particular school I teach with. I changed textbooks for this school from last semester to this one. I didn't realize that, by doing that, I was also taking away a speaking component that was already built in with the previous text. I want to create voiceboards where, just like a written discussion board, students verbally respond to an oral post, and then comment on the posts of their classmates. Vista Higher Learning's Adelante Supersite provides an actual voiceboard powerd by Wimba. But I've changed to the "En Linea" program for other reasons. But the voiceboards are not present in En Linea. It is nice that there are several assignments in En Linea which have them recording their voices (ideally, they are supposed to find an epartner, but logistically that will be a nightmare so I won't require it.) But I want more authentic communication, hence, a voiceboard. I have recently been alerted to a nice looking program called voicethread.com. It's not exactly what I am envisioning needing for my class, but it provides some of its own really great qualities. I have an idea, which will either be a masterpiece or a disaster. Or I guess it could also fall somewhere in between. I have been using vocaroo.com for awhile now with students who submit their voice recordings to me in an email. My idea is to have them record their voice there, then paste it into the discussion board. Then can then listen and verbally post to each other right there in the discussion board of D2L, hence, my voiceboard. My fear is that the process will be choppy, going back and forth between D2L and Vocaroo. It shouldn't be too bad if students just open up a second browser and go back and forth between the two. So we will see how it goes. But until the course starts on August 30, I will continue to scour the internet for other possible tools to fit my goal!

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

How do I keep online students engaged?

A few random thoughts...

  • Active learners are engaged learners. The very nature of online learning promotes learner-centered learning, as opposed to teacher-centered learning. This makes for an active, or engaged, learner. It is about what the students do, when they are ready to do it. They must take on an active role to completed the required assignments, not a passive role where they take notes during a lecture, not thinking about what they are writing down.
  • Weekly email updates from the instructor and teacher participation in discussion boards, giving detailed, constructive feedback, etc. Basically, the teacher putting for the effort helps motivate the students to do their part, thus keeping them engaged.
  • Social networking, such as Facebook and Twitter. For some students, these can be motivating factors which can create learner engagement.
  • Keeping students knowledgeable of the routine... having clear expectations of what is to come provides clarity and comfort for students. Students who know what to expect from a course and an instructor don't feel sideswiped or overwhelmed by surprises. This helps maintain their engagement in the course.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Is online learning for everyone?

I found this great resource that discusses the myths of online learning. I think it is right on the money, and I am including it in my Welcome Letter for my students this fall:

http://www.educationonline.com/dispel-some-myths-about-online-learning


I am wondering if or when online classes will be deemed as rigorous and demanding as face-to-face ones. After teaching totally online classes for 2 semesters now, the sense I get from a good number of students is that my class is way harder or more demanding than other online courses they have taken. I think the same can be said for face-to-face courses. I mean, very rarely does the majority of my students breeze through my class with little effort. I can't think of one class I have ever taught that I didn't have a good number of students struggling to get through. There are different reasons for this struggling always, but the point is that online or face-to-face, learning a second language is daunting.

I have only taken one online course, and have done some training for one of the new schools I'll be working with online in the fall. I like online learning. I find it relaxing to be able to learn at my own pace, wearing my scrubbie clothes, in the comfort of my rocker recliner with the tv on for background noise. I also like to be able to take my time and re-read the lecture or watch the video again if something has trouble sinking in. I guess that is a reflection of my learning style. I know this is not true of everybody, though. I also am not sure this delivery of learning would have been good for me in high school. I don't think I was ready to hold myself accountable. Even a couple years into college, I'm not sure this type of class would have been for me. But now I think it's a pretty good way to learn, and not feel inhibited in the process. But this is me.

It is my experience as an online instructor that many students cut off their own foot in the process. If you are not coming to a class where you are forced to hear the announcements, then you darn-well better read my weekly announcements I email out. This past spring, I tried a little experiment, just to verify. I was suspicious that many students were not reading the emails I was taking time to write each week. I was getting way too many questions that I had already answered in those emails. So one week, in the middle portion of my weekly email, I inconspicuously placed a sentence "if you are reading this, please send me a reply and I will award you bonus points." I was stunned that only about half of my students did so. I was convinced at that point I'd been sending a lot of wasted emails to people who simply weren't taking the time to read them. Or maybe I shouldn't so harshly call them wasted, after all the other half were reading them. (Glass half full or half empty, right?)

As I finish my thoughts on this post, I'm not sure these struggles are all that different from face-to-face courses anyway. Thinking back to my high school teaching days, there certainly was a high percentage of students who were physically there with me as I was making those ever-important announcements. Though there thoughts were clearly somewhere else, which means they didn't hear my announcements either. No, it feels different, but really it's all just the same! My quest continues to find ways to get through to ALL of my students, no matter the learning platform!

Monday, July 5, 2010

No summer school for me!


I must admit, I am very glad I have the summer off from teaching. I was really hoping for a summer teaching gig, either online or if I could swing an on-ground local position, I would have taken it. As an adjunct, you only get paid while you are actually working. Crazy concept huh? I suppose it sounds strange I even mention it, but a huge perk of being a full-time employee of a public school system is that you get paid year-round even though you only work 10 months.


At any rate, I felt I was needing a serious break. Yes, even from online teaching. The flexibility is great, and I wasn't just aching for the last day of school to get here as I did when working full-time. But the online format presents new challenges. I have found that when students primarily communicate with you via email, they feel brave enough to tell you how they really feel. For example, I offered students an opportunity to redo an assignment, they just needed to request I reset it for them to make that possible. The assignment was due by Tuesday at midnight. I went to bed around 11, which was the time I last checked email. The next morning, I have an email from a student, sent at approximately 11:30, asking me to reset it for him to compelete again. Being that he missed the deadline of midnight, I responded saying that I did not intend to allow it, since the deadline had passed. He emailed back stating he was "disappointed" in me with that response. He claimed he didn't know that the redo also had to be done before the deadline. I guess for a college level course, I didn't feel I needed to spell that out, but perhaps I was wrong on that. He certainly let me know how he felt.


At the time, I was pretty upset about it. Negative emails from students to me means that I have failed them in some way, whether I'm justified or not. But I was just visiting with a fellow adjunct this morning, a friend of mine who is teaching this summer. She told me that one of her students was disgruntled about a decision she had made and therefore went over her head to her supervisor to formally complain. This supervisor took the time to register the complaint, and then overruled the instructor with what he thought was fair for the student. The instructor was not consulted, nor was there any teamwork in this decision. The student complained and the supervisor bent. I am a firm believer in following the proper chain of command. If a student has a problem with an instructor, that should be the first person to contact. If no resolution is made, then let's bring in the supervisor. But not vice versa!


So, I think back to my student from this past spring and it gives me new perspective. I am actually very glad that he chose to express his disappointment with me, to me, not to my supervisor. As far as I know, as an online adjunct instructor, I have not had a student go to my supervisor without first speaking with me. Actually, I don't even think I've had a student go to a supervisor, period. If so, nobody has alerted me about it!


So, being just after the 4th of July, I am beginning the descent of summer... getting ready for fall. I've been doing a lot of planning and making changes in my courses to hopefully improve them. I am getting excited to have students again!!! You have to take the bad communications from students with the good... and there certainly have been a lot of good. So I will take the bad.