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1
@ONE Carnegie Scholars
Supporting and Promoting Effective
Teaching with Technology
@ONE Carnegie Scholars / MEET Grant Programs
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
Presenters
John Whitmer: @ONE Project DirectorBlaine Morrow: CCC Confer Project DirectorDespina Prapavessi: 2004-2005 MEETer, Diablo Valley CollegeGregory Beyrer: 2004-2005 MEETer, Cosumnes River College
Tom Miner: 2004-2005 Scholar, Sacramento City
College
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
@ONE Carnegie Scholar Program
5. Q&A
1. @ONE Carnegie Scholar Program Overview
2. Classroom Action Research
3. Tom Miner: Instructor vs. Student -Moderated Discussion Boards
4. Lessons Learned
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
@ONE Project Overview
@ONE provides technology training, support, and online resources to California Community College faculty, staff and IT professionals in order to enhance student learning and success.
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
@ONE Carnegie Scholar Program
Research fellowship for CCC faculty to investigate teaching with technology with their own students
@ONE provides stipend, research mentors, 2 research retreats, and a collaborative online learning environment to support research
Sponsored by Chancellor’s Office, California Community Colleges
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
@ONE Carnegie Scholar Program
Scholars may use any technology in any discipline, whether classroom, online, or hybrid
Scholar cohort provides mutual support
Goal 1: create useful information for other faculty
Goal 2: improve your teaching and research skills
8@ONE Carnegie Scholars
2005-2006 Proposal Evaluation Criteria
1. Purpose - What issue does the research address? (15 pts)
2. Activities / Methodology - How will the applicant conduct their research? (15 pts)
3. Technology Application - What specific use of technology will the applicant study? (5 pts)
4. Dissemination - How will the Scholar inform others about their research? (5 pts)
@ONE Carnegie Scholars9
2003-2004 Carnegie ScholarsName College Department Research Topic Michael Yeong
Los Medanos College
English Integration of Technology into a Developmental Reading, Writing, and Critical Thinking Course
David Evans
Pasadena City College
Business & Computer Technology
Online Student Retention
Tom Miner Sacramento City College
English Online vs. Traditional Discussion Boards in an English Composition Class
Letty Wong De Anza College ESL Using Calibrated Peer Review in an ESL Writing Class
Romy Thiele
Cañada College Business/Office Technology
Learning Communities in a Combined ESL / Computer Applications Course
Marina Brodskaya
Cañada College ESL Learning Communities in a Combined ESL / Computer Applications Course
10@ONE Carnegie Scholars
2005-06 @ONE Carnegie Scholars (1)
1. Gregory Beyrer - Distance Education and Media Services, Cosumnes River College"Online Student Success": Making a Difference
2. Carolyn Brown - Graphic Design, Foothill CollegeStudent engagement and outcome in online courses; what can we learn from face-to-face learning communities?
3. Cheryl Carter - Counseling, Diablo Valley CollegeNon-Traditional Student Participation in Synchronous Online Workshops
4. Bobby Hutchison - Business, Behavioral and Social Sciences, Modesto Junior CollegeThe Impact of Online Human Sexuality Education on Percpetions of Risk, Worry and Knowledge
5. Leeds, Kelvin - Mathematics, Santa Ana CollegeTechnology: Fad or Fixture
11@ONE Carnegie Scholars
2005-06 @ONE Carnegie Scholars (2)
6. Len, Patrick - Physical Sciences, Cuesta CollegeAnalyzing Individual and Cooperative Electronic Response Systems to Improve Student Learning and Attitudes in Astronomy
7. Longacre, Susan - Registered Nursing, City College of San FranciscoUtilizing Online Simulated Clinical Scenarios to Develop Critical Thinking in the Nursing Student
8. Lukas, Scottv - Anthropology/Sociology, Lake Tahoe CollegeAn Assessment of Reflexive Student Learning in Online Social Science Courses
9. Rice-Farrand, Frances - Nursing, Los Angeles City CollegeEducation for Future
10. Stiglich, Denise - Math and Science, Antelope Valley CollegeInteractive PowerPoint and Online Homework Programs in the Classroom
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
Classroom Action Research (CAR)
Classroom Action Research is one form of the scholarship of teaching
If traditional research is designed to provide description and build theory, the goal of CAR is to improve the practice of teaching
– Dr. Gwenn Mettetal, Division of Education, Indiana University at South Bend
– Website for more information: www.iusb.edu/~gmetteta
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
CAR Conducted by the Practitioner
Focuses on local problems or goalsHas less emphasis on literature; often
uses secondary sourcesUses less formal procedures, which may
change during studyEstablishes validity through triangulation
(at least three types of data )Uses convenient measuresFocuses on practical, not statistical,
significance
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
Tom MinerSacramento City College
Research Question: Which are more effective: instructor or
student moderated discussion boards?
Research Methods: Pre- and post-class surveys,
moderators’ reflective letters, comparison of three discussion boards (number, length, quality)
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
Midterm Discussion Board Quality of Posts
7.4
8.298.07
8.58.2
InstructorMod
Some(w/SM)
Some(w/oSM)
Most(w/SM)
Most(w/oSM)
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
Average Student Posts on Final Discussion Boards
3.25
6.87Mostly Student Moderated
(with student moderators)
2.8
Instructor moderated
Mostly Student Moderated(without student moderators)
Some Student Moderation
(w/o student moderators)
3.07
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
Lessons Learned (1)
Framing the QuestionGathering the EvidenceCollaboration & Follow throughImpact on Teaching
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
Lessons Learned (2)
Project ManagementFaculty-driven contentProcess & Product are outcomes More Carrots, Less SticksKeeping It Simple
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@ONE Carnegie Scholars
Questions?
@ONE Website: http://one.evc.edu
John Whitmer: @ONE Project Director: [email protected] 408.223.6788
Tom Miner: Sacramento City College
Modeling Effective Educational Technology
CCC Confer’s MEET ProjectA System-wide initiative to explore the educational potential of e-conferencing
What is MEET?
An initiative from CCC Confer 20 Grants @$2000 each Aimed at instruction using e-
conferencing technology Grant Period: 12/04 – 12/05 An educational technology users’
group
What is MEET?
Modeling (The act or art of sculpturing or forming in a pliable material)
Effective (Producing a strong impression or response; striking)
Educational (Serving to educate; instructive)
Technology (in this case,e-Conferencing via CCC Confer)
MEET Recipients
Gregory Beyrer and Kakwasi Somadhi, Cosumnes River College
Anoop Bhargava, Moorpark College
Douglas Borcoman, Coastline CC
David Brown, Alan Hancock
Alexander Cheroske, Moorpark
Solveg Cooper, Cuesta College
Liz Crisp and Dennis Driver, Ohlone
Jeffrey Diamond, Santa Rosa Jr. College
Charles Eason, Solano Sherry Goldsmith and
Aaron Holmes, Palomar
More MEETers
John Gonder, Las Positas
Cliff Gottlieb, Shasta Michaela Monahan,
Southwestern College James Musgrave, San
Diego Mesa Despina Prapavessi,
Diablo Valley CC
Robin Rogers Cloud, Saddleback
Valerie Taylor, De Anza College
Connie Tucker, Citrus College
Grace Van Thillo, Mt. San Jacinto
Lauren Watson, Saddleback
Typical Format of Online Courses at Diablo Valley College
Courses start with a two hour face to face orientation meeting
Goals• Discuss successful online learning• Go over the course syllabus• Show the online web site
Inherent Problems
• Students miss the orientation meeting
• Students cannot add the course late
• Students do not use online tools effectively later in the course.
Orientation meeting template using MEET & CONFERe-conferencing technology
CONTENTS Discuss successful online learning
• Presentation becomes more interactive• Students can access relevant materials later if needed
Go over the Course Syllabus• Q&A sessions
Tour the online web site• Direct student through a series of screen captures• Easier to see and follow• Students can review when needed
Problems Solutions
Students miss the orientation meeting
Students cannot add the course late
Students do not use online tools effectively later in the course
Students can attend the orientation meeting anytime, anyplace
Students can add late.
Students can go over any details they forgot, ask questions and review as needed.
Gregory Beyrer and Kakwasi Somadhi, Cosumnes River College“Online Tutor Training for Online Tutoring”
CRC’s Distance Education Master Plan (draft) Goals:
“The College is committed to ensuring comparable quality education, effective support services, and accessible learning materials in its distance education program as it does in all of its other endeavors.”
Issues/Objectives: “Provide access to tutoring for DE students”
Best practices in tutoring1. Environment
• Shared workspace• Safe and welcoming
2. Skills of tutor• Relationship-building skills (trust)• Content knowledge
Asynchronous vs. synchronous?
Tutoring Issues – Online?
Online Tutoring and CCCConfer “MEET”
Easy to useFriendly help staffPrivate workspaceArchive review
Telephone eases communicationTechnology expertise for tutors
Environment
Skills
Pilot Project
Single classExperienced online instructorExperienced tutors
Training moduleRole play videotapedInstruction manualSix- or nine-week half-unit class
Future expansion plans