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Friday, September 21, 2012

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Setting Up an Online Learning Experience

Setting Up an Online Learning Experience
After reading the require reading and viewing the Video online environment is an essential step to creating a positive learning experience. “Computer knowledge is a deeper understanding of how technology works. It provides a foundation for you to understand how technology is being used today and how you might use technology in the future. For example, knowing how the Internet works provides the foundation for you to understand the potential of electronic commerce and to understand how information about you can be collected and dispensed without your consent” (http://books.mcgraw-hill.com/computing/oleary/pdf/ole65985_ch01_web.pdf).


What is the significance of knowing the technology available to you?
All sources are important when it comes to researching and knowing where to go and receive it. You might have a paper and need more information to finish the paper or the research. Conrad and Donaldson (2011, p. 38) state, “the biggest challenges is making sure that all participants have the necessary skill level with the communication tools that will be used during the course. Tracking students’ use of the technology is essential. The best way for students to learn to use the online course tools is to actually use them. The significance of knowing that technology is available is to focus on the essential tools, and build your first course around those tools. The primary tool to become familiar with is the course management systems (CMS)”.


Why is it essential to communicate clear expectations to learners? It is essential to communicate clear high expectation to facilitators and the need to create a welcoming learning environment that connects trust and respect. The learners need to have a clear understanding where they may be able to perform or translate what is being communicated to them. “High expectations must not exist in a vacuum; they are an integral part of a larger learning environment that is solidified at the beginning of a learning experience. Student performance is significantly affected by how we communicate expectations for performance and how we communicate confidence that conditions for success exist in our classrooms. In general, students will perform to the level of their own, their peers’, and their professors’ expectations” (http://books.mcgraw-hill.com/computing/oleary/pdf/ole65985_ch01_web.pdf).


What additional considerations should the instructor take into account when setting up an online learning experience?
Boettcher and Conrad (2010, p. 53) state, “The instructor focuses on creating a comfortable and trusting learning environment and begins implementing the course plan for the first weeks. The faculty member models thinking behavior by making connections among the learners, the content, and the desired learning outcomes. Other important actions for the faculty member are making course requirements clear and processes for communicating explicit, leading the launch of the course learning community, and ensuring that all students are engaged”. The instructor needs to be sure that all the information is clear, precise and able to understand on that student’s level.


References
Boettcher, J. V., & Conrad, R. (2010). The online teaching survival guide: Simple and practical pedagogical tips. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Conrad, R., & Donaldson, J. A. (2011). Engaging the online learner: Activities and resources for creative instruction (Updated ed.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Setting High Expectations Retrieved from

1 comment:

  1. Iva,I think you hit all the high spots. Staying positive, knowing the technology, clear communication and making sure students feel comfortable and safe are the critical considerations for any learning environment.

    I found the resource you cited because it sounded so interesting - http://books.mcgraw-hill.com/computing/oleary/pdf/ole65985_ch01_web.pdf - but I am not sure what it is? Could you please share author and publication date?

    And another question: how do you think these important points differ in the online classroom as opposed to the face to face setting?
    Lydia Freeman

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