Posts Tagged ‘elearning’

Connecting the parts of a hybrid class

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

From Judith McDaniel 

          I do like teaching hybrid classes.  From my perspective, they combine the best of online and face-to-face experiences for my students. 
          I enjoy meeting and interacting with students in person.  Some information is easier to convey in a lecture and powerpoint format when I am there to answer questions, sense what is clear to them and monitor what is not. 
          Online discussion groups once a week also work well for me and the students.  They have three days to read the material associated with the prompt, respond to it, and then agree or disagree with a fellow student.
          One day early in the semester, to give them the feel of a discussion, I used our in class time to divide my 20+ students into two groups.  I set up a proposition based on the article they had read for that day, assigned one group to “pro” and one to “con,” gave them 10 minutes to confer with the group and then started the debate.  Some seemed to enjoy the exercise, a few participated reluctantly, and several said not a word. discussion
          I noticed those students, and when the online discussions began the following week, I monitored them closely, encouraging those who seemed reluctant to advance an opinion.  Within a couple of weeks, everyone participated, everyone was advancing and questioning opinions based on evidence from the reading. 
          At the end of the semester, I did my usual evaluations, online and in person.  As we sat in the classroom, the students talked about how much they had learned from the online discussions, how much they had enjoyed learning one another’s opinions.  “I wish we could have known one another in class as well,” said one woman.  “Yes,” chimed in another.  “I never knew who was who in class.  I’d like to have put a face to the names in my discussion group.”
          Of course. I assumed they all knew one another, they were, after all, all majors in the same department.  But this is a large university and for the most part they were strangers to one another in our face-to-face class.  The next time I teach this class, that won’t happen.  I will make sure we work in groups, match names to faces and opinions. One easy option is to encourage them all to post a photo with their profile on the classlist.
          But it has made me wonder.  What other dots have I failed to connect between the online and in class portions of this course?

Multitasking = Screw Ups

Monday, August 16th, 2010

from Jan Schwartz

2591454436_2d316a1820_mBefore I got on a conference call this morning I was deep into working on a webinar. The call, as usual, started with some chatting as we were waiting for everyone to join. I decided to keep working on the Keynote (PowerPoint to you non-Mac users) until we REALLY got started. So of course the Keynote was up on my screen, as were about 5 other documents and websites, along with Skype.

This is called multitasking by the masses. I’m either the only person among the masses who can’t multitask or those who say they multitask are blowing smoke.  I’m not saying you CAN’T do more than one thing at a time, I’m saying I don’t know how people can do more than one thing WELL at a time.

I missed when the real meeting started to take place, but it was somewhere between the iStock photo website and my script when I heard my name. “I guess Jan must have lost the call.” Whoops! I quickly saved what I was doing and minimized all my screens. Then I said, “Hey, I’m back, sorry about that!”

How many times has this happened to you? I learned some time ago that I couldn’t do more than one thing well at a time, especially on the computer. This morning was unusual for me–I generally do put aside what I am doing so I can pay attention to what is happening on the conference call. I read Brain Rules by John Medina and that is what made me give up even trying to multitask. I will say that before I read this book, I thought that I should be learning to multitask, because everyone was doing it. I’ve since changed my mind, at least about doing multiple tasks that require attention. I can still walk, talk and chew gum all at the same time.1034031447_edea115848_m

Here is what Medina says,

To put it bluntly, research shows that we can’t multitask. We are biologically incapable of processing attention-rich inputs simultaneously.

He then goes on to give some examples of what the research shows.  I’ll leave it to you to read the book.

My own example: I can’t tell you how many times I missed a turn because I was talking to someone while driving–even the person sitting next to me.  Both tasks required paying attention.

Medina is not saying we can’t walk, talk and chew gum at the same time, but that we can’t pay attention to multiple cognitive tasks at the same time and do any one of them justice.

So what do you think people mean when they say they multitask and how do you think it affects how we learn, online and otherwise?

Photo credits: Flickr, CarbonNYC and Flickr, Mike Licht