My presentation is entitled, "Effective Strategies for Empowering Faculty to Teach Online". Along with my colleague, Rosemary Waterston, I design and deliver a 30 hour online workshop for faculty to develop best practices for learner-centered, web-based instruction. This workshop is accredited as part of the Continuing Medical Education Certification Program offered by the Centre for Faculty Development in Medicine, at the University of Toronto.
My presentation will focus on 3 areas;
- Structure for delivering the workshop
- Themes explored and resources used to train faculty about teaching online
- Strategies designed to promote faculty collaboration in the development and delivery of online learning
Structure for delivering the teaching online workshop
A hybrid delivery format is used for the workshop . It begins with an in-class session and includes an orientation to online learning in the Blackboard courseware environment, a guest lecture presentation by a faculty mentor, and some group activities designed to arouse interest and motivation and to establish the instructional purpose. For the next several weeks, participants are encouraged to login daily to review online lecture notes and resources, participate in asynchronous and synchronous discussions and to complete the required learning activities. The workshop concludes with a face to face session where participants reflect on their web-based learning experiences.
The UofT ‘Teaching Online Workshop’ was created to help educators to teach online by giving them an opportunity to experience web-based learning. The contextual setting for the workshop was authentic in that instructors were learning in the same environment they would be required to use for teaching. We believe that in order to be an effective online teacher, instructors must experience web-based learning from the student perspective (Gold, 2001). Being exposed to the strategies and dynamics of online learning is the best way to inform instructors about the benefits and challenges of this mode of delivery. The knowledge gained from these experiences will help instructors to decide how to best integrate online learning as part of their course delivery. During the workshop the participants are actively engaged in identifying strategies for personal course development and delivery.
The main advantage of providing the workshop online is the degree of flexibility it offers faculty to work around their teaching, research and clinical commitments. They are able to access the material from home and a variety of work locations. Live presentations and synchronous chats are archived for those unable to attend the sessions in ‘real time’. Although the timelines and the structure of the content are provided by the instructors, the progression through the learning content is self-directed. This is an important delivery strategy as not all of the material is equally relevant to each of the participants. The learners will be able to customize the learning by selecting the resources applicable to their specific course. This approach also allows the instructors to focus their attention on the individual learners and address specific questions or challenges related to the development of each course.
Questions for consideration?
What factors influence the decisions about the format for delivering faculty development workshops?
What are some of the significant instructional challenges associated with creating and delivering faculty development workshops?
How have you used technology to overcome some of these challenges?
Future postings will continue to explore the material for my upcoming presentation.
Please feel free to contribute to the discussion by clicking on the comments link at the end of this posting.
References
Gold, S. (2001). A constructivist approach to online training for online teachers. JALN, (5)1, 36-57
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Posted by: portal web | September 15, 2007 at 04:00 PM
I am a doctoral student at Capella University and I am developing my proposal for my dissertatation. I want to develop a survey for faculty as to how and why they chose to use certain tools in WebCT. I want not just what they use, but try to determine the pedagogy behind their choice.
This then would be the basis to determine the training needs for online faculty. I chose WebCT since the entire state of Ct. uses it and we are moving to Vista for Fall, 05.
If anyone has information about a school that may have done a similar survey, I would love to see it. I have not found but one source of a survey that did this type of study.
Posted by: Kathy Cercone | December 06, 2004 at 11:26 AM
The process of designing for elearning instruction is complex and has many steps.
You may find the following websites helpful.
A quick guide to instructional design on the Web.
http://www.edtech.vt.edu/edtech/id/wbi/index.html
http://www.gdrc.org/info-design/instruct/elearning-links.html
A good overview of the process
http://www.elearnspace.org/Articles/InstructionalDesign.htm
Posted by: Ferdinand | February 19, 2004 at 12:03 PM
Dear sar/Madame
I want to desing e-learning in a training departmet.
please help me , How I can desing a sestem for that.
Thanks.
A.ahmadvand
Posted by: ali ahmadvand | February 10, 2004 at 07:07 AM