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El. knyga: Teaching Online: A Practical Guide

3.59/5 (123 ratings by Goodreads)
(New York University, USA),
  • Formatas: 510 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Feb-2017
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781135055578
  • Formatas: 510 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Feb-2017
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781135055578

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Teaching Online: A Practical Guide is an accessible, introductory, and comprehensive guide for anyone who teaches online. The fourth edition of this bestselling resource has been fully revised, maintains its reader-friendly tone, and offers exceptional practical advice, new teaching examples, faculty interviews, and an updated resource section.

New to this edition:











entire new chapter on MOOCs (massive open online courses);





expanded information on teaching with mobile devices, using open educational resources, and learning analytics;





additional interviews with faculty, case studies, and examples;





spotlight on new tools and categories of tools, especially multimedia.

Focusing on the "hows" and "whys" of implementation rather than theory, the fourth edition of Teaching Online is a must-have resource for anyone teaching online or thinking about teaching online.

Recenzijos

The newest edition is truly better than ever! This book is packed with great, useful information for the beginner and even the expert online teacher. The additions of mobile learning, analytics, and case studies to the 4th edition are exceptional, and the updated glossary and links section makes this a book to keep close at hand for ready reference as you go through the semester.

--Ray Schroeder, Director of the UPCEA Center for Online Leadership

The 4th Edition of Teaching Online, even more than its predecessors, is invaluable for both novice and experienced online instructors. Online instruction, like teaching itself, has evolved, and so has this indispensable guide. What Teaching Online does best of all is put the emphasis on that first word, teaching, and put everything else at its service. What makes the book exciting is how it shows that teaching online is transformative, opening up possibilities that dont exist in the traditional classroom, better serving students needs and realizing teachers goals.

--George Otte, University Director of Academic Technology, The City University of New York and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, The CUNY School of Professional Studies

Preface xix
Part I Getting Started 1(30)
1 Teaching Online: An Overview
3(20)
The Range of Online Experiences: Two Hypothetical Cases
6(6)
Western Philosophy, a Course Taught Entirely Online
7(3)
Introduction to Physics, a "Blended" Course
10(2)
Teaching Online: The Basics
12(4)
Teaching a Course Entirely Online
12(4)
What about Support Personnel and Training?
16(2)
Do You Have to Be a Computer Expert?
18(1)
What Can Teaching Online Do for You?
19(4)
Heightened Awareness of Your Teaching
19(2)
New Connections with the Wider World
21(1)
Your Students Need You More than Ever
22(1)
2 Scouting the Territory: Exploring Your Institution's Resources
23(8)
Questions to Ask about Your Institution's Resources
24(9)
What's Already in Place?
24(1)
What Kind of Software Is Available at Your Institution to Run Online Courses?
25(1)
What Is the Profile of Student Users?
25(1)
What Kind of Technical Support Does Your Institution Provide?
26(2)
What Kind of Instructor Training and Support Is Available?
28(3)
Part II Putting the Course Together 31(260)
3 Course Design and Development
33(59)
Some Examples of Course Design and Development
34(6)
A Speech Course Taught Entirely Online
34(2)
A Blended Course in Italian Language and Culture
36(2)
A Blended Mechanical Engineering Course
38(2)
Initial Steps in Course Design and Development
40(10)
Analysis
43(1)
Course Goals and Learning Objectives/Outcomes
43(4)
Design
47(3)
Rubrics and Guidelines for Online Course Design
50(2)
Other Design Considerations
52(3)
Universal Design and Accessibility
52(2)
Adult Learners
54(1)
Scaffolding
54(1)
Low-Stakes Assignments
55(1)
Course Development
55(4)
Some Help in Getting Organized
56(3)
Instructor-Generated Content and Presentation: Lectures and Commentary
59(10)
Text
59(1)
PowerPoint Slide Shows
60(1)
Narrated Slides, Audio or Videotaping, and Screencasting
61(2)
Instructor Presentation: Simulations and Experiments
63(1)
Using External Content
63(1)
Discussion/Interaction/Communications
64(5)
Group-Oriented Work and Student Presentation
69(8)
Research
72(2)
Assessment Considerations
74(3)
High-Stakes, Low-Stakes Testing
77(4)
Low-Stakes Testing
77(1)
High-Stakes Testing
77(4)
Assuring Academic Integrity among Your Students
81(2)
Choosing Textbooks, Coursepacks, and Software for Your Course
83(1)
Redesign
84(5)
Redesign from Longer to Shorter
85(3)
Redesign from Shorter to Longer
88(1)
Some Final Tips on Course Development
89(3)
4 Working with Others to Develop a Course
92(19)
A Model of Instructor-Designer Collaboration
93(2)
Advice for Instructional Designers on Working with Instructors
95(3)
Advice for Instructors Working within a Team Approach
98(6)
How to Best Approach a Course You Did Not Develop but Are Asked to Teach
104(2)
Suggestions for Approaching the Teaching of a Highly Standardized Course
106(2)
Competency-Based Education and Adaptive Learning Modules
108(3)
5 Creating an Effective Online Syllabus
111(27)
The Contract
113(3)
Class Participation and Grading Criteria
113(1)
Managing Student Expectations
114(2)
The Map
116(2)
The Schedule
118(4)
Using Specific Dates
118(3)
Supplying Information More than Once
121(1)
Sample Syllabi: Online and Blended Course Versions
122(16)
6 Building an Online Classroom
138(35)
Templates
141(1)
Dividing Up and Organizing Your Material and Activities
142(9)
Timing of Access
143(2)
Pacing Considerations
145(1)
Content Presentation Areas
146(3)
Adding Multimedia Content
149(2)
Announcement Areas
151(1)
Syllabus and Schedule Areas
152(1)
Threaded Discussion Forums
152(4)
Blogs and Comment-Based Discussion
154(1)
Other Types of Discussion
154(2)
Other Communication Tools
156(11)
Internal Message Centers, Internal Tools for External Email
156(1)
Instant Messaging and Texting
156(1)
Chat, Whiteboard, and Other Collaborative and Screensharing Tools
157(2)
Group Activity Areas
159(1)
Internet Resource Collections and Curation
160(2)
ePortfolios
162(1)
Searching Capabilities
163(1)
Quizmakers
163(2)
Student Progress Reports, Tracking and Alerts, Learning Analytics
165(2)
Online Gradebooks
167(1)
Other Course Areas and Features
167(6)
Mobile Apps
169(1)
Connecting to Social Networking Sites
169(1)
Finding the Right Tools and Keeping Informed
170(1)
Virtual Worlds
171(2)
7 Student Activities in the Online Environment
173(53)
Group Activities
174(13)
Dividing Students into Groups
177(2)
Supervision and Assessment of Groups
179(8)
Role Playing and Simulations
187(8)
Computer-Based Simulations and Serious Games
190(5)
Summaries, Consensus Groups
195(1)
The Experience-Based Practicum or Lab Assignment
196(1)
Reflective Activities
197(5)
Just Discussion
202(1)
Scenarios and Case Studies
203(3)
Peer Editing and Review
206(1)
Student Activities Involving Guest Speakers
206(3)
Cross-Cultural Exchanges
209(6)
Cross-Cultural Classes and Teams
210(3)
The Challenges and Rewards of Cross-Cultural Courses
213(2)
Using the Internet as a Resource
215(8)
Preparing the Way
215(1)
Evaluating Websites
216(1)
Varieties of Useful Websites
217(5)
Using the Internet as a Resource: Two Examples
222(1)
A Grading Rubric for Every Activity?
223(3)
8 Copyright, Intellectual Property, and Open Educational Resources
226(18)
Copyright and Fair Use in the United States
227(7)
Is Anyone Really Watching?
230(1)
Finding the Rightful Owner
231(1)
What to Do If You Aren't Sure Whether You Need Permission
231(2)
What about Links and Embedded Resources?
233(1)
Students and Third Party Sites
234(1)
Intellectual Property in the United States
234(5)
The Legal Status of Your Work
235(2)
Practical Steps for Protecting Your Work
237(1)
Checking for Unauthorized Use
238(1)
Open Educational Resources (OER)
239(1)
Creative Commons License
240(2)
Special Issues Related to Free but Commercial Web 2.0 Sites
242(2)
9 Creating Courseware: Selecting "Web 2.0" Tools and Other Resources
244(47)
Creating Text for Course Pages
246(27)
Creating Web Pages in a Web Editor
247(1)
Creating Class Website Outside an LMS
248(1)
The How and Why of Images
249(1)
Finding Images
250(5)
The How and Why of Audio
255(3)
Embedding Audio for Feedback in PDFs and Word
258(1)
Audio Recording and Sharing for Multiple Purposes
259(1)
Podcasting Services
260(1)
Narrated Slide Shows
261(1)
Non-Narrated Slide Show Presentations
261(2)
The How and Why of Video
263(2)
Sites and Tools for Hosting and Sharing Video
265(1)
Screen-Capture/Screencasting Video Software
266(2)
Creating Interactive Video Lessons
268(1)
Animation and Whiteboard Animation
268(1)
Whiteboard/Screencast Capture
269(1)
Social Curation/Bulletin Boards
269(1)
Student-Generated Content
270(3)
Other Tools
273(9)
Polls and Surveys
273(1)
Real-Time Quizzes
274(2)
Mind-Mapping
276(1)
Word Clouds
277(1)
Infographics
278(1)
Timelines
278(1)
Interactive Maps
279(1)
Avatar Generators
280(2)
Using or Creating Multimedia: Why and When Is It Worth It?
282(3)
When to Avoid Multimedia and Web 2.0 Tools
285(3)
Evaluating Web 2.0 and Other Ed Tech Tools
287(1)
Pulling It All Together
288(3)
Part III Teaching in the Online Classroom 291(137)
10 Preparing Students for Online Learning
293(15)
Problems That Students Typically Encounter
294(3)
Technical Problems
295(1)
Problems Related to Learning Style and Online Communication
295(2)
Preparing Your Students
297(7)
Readiness Programs
297(1)
Orientation Programs
298(1)
Preparing Your Own Orientation Program
299(1)
Elements of an Orientation
300(4)
A Final Note
304(1)
Providing FACIs
304(1)
Introductory Techniques
305(3)
11 Classroom Management and Facilitation
308(41)
Record Keeping and File Management
308(5)
Tips for Record Keeping
309(3)
Electronic Files versus Hard Copy
312(1)
Managing Communications
313(7)
Creating a Uniform Announcement Area and the Use of Announcements
313(2)
That All Important First Announcement
315(1)
Using Video for Announcements
316(2)
Setting Rules and Establishing a Protocol for All Communications
318(2)
Encouraging Participation and Managing Your Workload
320(7)
The Effect of Class Size
320(2)
Group Strategies and Interactivity of Content
322(2)
Changing Class Sizes
324(3)
Finding a Balance between Student-Centered and Instructor-Centered Activities
327(3)
Some General Guidelines for Student Participation
328(2)
Asynchronous or Synchronous Discussion?
330(8)
Tips for Fostering Asynchronous Discussion
331(7)
Managing Student-Led Discussion
338(1)
Tips for Establishing Effective Instructor-Facilitated Synchronous Communication
339(5)
Team Teaching Online
344(5)
The Shared Responsibility Model
345(1)
The Division of Labor Model
346(1)
The Primary-Secondary Model
347(2)
12 Classroom Management: Special Issues
349(19)
Privacy Issues
349(2)
Identity Issues
351(2)
Managing Student Behavior Online
353(14)
Noisy Students
354(1)
Quiet Students
355(2)
Disruptive Students
357(1)
Dealing with Disruptive Students
358(6)
Other Behavior Problems
364(2)
A Special Word about Social Media
366(1)
A Final Word
367(1)
13 Teaching Web-Enhanced and Blended Classes
368(21)
Tips for Teaching Web-Enhanced Courses
370(13)
Posting Lectures Online
370(1)
A Revised Approach to Lecturing
371(1)
How to Post Your Content Online
372(1)
Using a Discussion Board
373(1)
Enlisting Technology in Your Favor
374(1)
Using Online Quizmaking Tools
375(1)
Providing Advice and Support
376(1)
Conferring with Students Online
377(1)
Establishing Virtual Office Hours
378(1)
Assigning Group Projects
379(1)
Online as a Student Presentation Medium
380(1)
Web-Based Exercises
381(1)
Team Teaching
382(1)
A Final Thought on Web Enhancement
382(1)
Tips for Teaching Blended Courses
383(6)
Preparing for the Blended Course
383(2)
Design Issues for the Blended Course
385(2)
Teaching the Blended Course
387(2)
14 Teaching and Learning in a MOOC
389(18)
Defining MOOCs and the Role of the Teacher
390(6)
Instructor Presentation of Content and Instructor Presence
392(4)
Designing for a Disparate Student Audience
396(7)
Facilitation of Discussion
398(3)
Grading and Feedback
401(2)
The Social Element
403(1)
Issues to Consider before Teaching a MOOC
403(4)
15 Taking Advantage of New Opportunities
407(21)
New Career Directions
407(2)
What to Do after You've Read This Book
409(3)
Further Training
409(3)
Opportunities for Further Training Outside Your Own Institution
412(12)
Focused Workshop Training
416(1)
Learning from Your Own Experience
417(4)
Where Do We Go from Here?
421(3)
Networking with Others Involved in Online Education
424(1)
Student Expectations
424(2)
The Educational Marketplace
426(2)
Glossary 428(8)
Guide to Resources 436(35)
Index 471
Susan Ko has spent more than twenty years creating and directing faculty development programs for online teaching at diverse institutions, including City University at New York and University of Maryland University College.

Steve Rossen, Instructional Technologist and Electronic Librarian, was formerly Manager of the Faculty New Media Center at UCLA.