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IMPACT Plus Ownership #1: Creating a Learning Environment

By Ann Sitomer posted 06-05-2020 12:00:00

  

IMPACT Plus Ownership #1: Creating a Learning Environment


The IMPACT document describes three areas of faculty OWnership: creating a learning environment, taking an active role in course design, and becoming a reflective practitioner.


This week I would like us to reflect on ‘creating a learning environment’ as we teach during a pandemic. The blog post linked below was written by a colleague here at OSU. In Oregon, we are on a quarter system, and my colleagues and their students are currently preparing for finals. We had an entire term of remote teaching. This provided an opportunity to survey both students and faculty about their experiences with Remote Teaching and Learning and learn from these experiences. This blog post, Practical Solutions to Remote Learning Issues, shares some of the findings from the data of students’ experiences (the issues) and strategies to address these issues. There is also a link to a helpful ‘infographic’ that lists additional strategies to address three remote learning issues.


Let’s return to faculty ownership. The blog and infographic provide strategies to address the remote learning issues students told us they are facing, but we have to ‘diagnose’ these issues in order to address them.


What are techniques you use to diagnose the challenges your students are having in a remote space? How successful were these techniques? What would you do differently to assess students’ learning challenges?


#RG-ResearchGrants
#Research
#Ownership
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Comments

06-09-2020 21:42:56

Yes, one of the takeaways from the data we collected at OSU is that students want 'clear' expectations, which is something I think most of us have mastered in a F2F space. Maybe folks have less bandwidth to read right now? So much of our current conversations involve reading and writing -- and I know I fall behind all the time on these virtual conversations. 

Crazy idea... Is there a a way to make a syllabus that does not need to be read?

More thoughts about Julie's post when we have our conversation about being a reflective practitioner!

06-09-2020 20:39:11

What are techniques you use to diagnose the challenges your students are having in a remote space? How successful were these techniques? What would you do differently to assess students’ learning challenges?

I realized that I since I do not have students F2F that I am having trouble getting the students to understand that test corrections are a priority.  In the F2F class, I assigned test corrections as part of their grade (not in addition to their grade). 

So I created a web-based form of this formative assessment applied to their already graded summative assessment.  The online version is so much better than what I had done F2F... with the exception that many students did not realize this was a graded assignment.  Preconceptions about test corrections is that a student who made an A on the test... does not need to make corrections.  I have now added that 'THIS IS AN ASSIGNMENT FOR EVERYONE!' to the instructions... and  'THIS IS NOT A EXTRA CREDIT ASSIGNMENT... THIS IS A REAL ASSIGNMENT.'  

I was surprised that I had to do that.  Being a reflective practitioner is part of how we do business and I am learning how to better educate and assist students because of it.  The cycle of innovation and learning continues.

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