ARE YOU EXPERIENCED?
DETERMINING EXISTING ONLINE TEACHING COMPETENCE
IN NEWLY HIRED FACULTY
Thomas Cavanagh, Ph.D. -- Assistant Vice President, Distributed Learning
Linda Futch, Ed.D. -- Associate Department Head
Nancy Swenson -- Instructional Designer
University of Central Florida
Audience Survey
Is your institution experiencing growth in online
courses?
How many of you provide faculty development for
online courses?
Is your faculty development required?
How many of you receive questions about faculty with
previous online experience?
How do you deal with these questions?
Why Faculty Development?
(Internal Pressures)
Rapid growth in online courses
12.9% growth in 2008 (national: Sloan)
31% growth Fall 08-09 (UCF)
Minnesota State system proposes 25% of all MnSCU
credits be earned online by 2015.
Faculty who have never taught online are being
assigned (or have expressed an interest)
Why Faculty Development?
(Internal Pressures)
Enable faculty success (and student success)
As opposed to onerous administrative requirement
True online course is not simply a “remediation” of
classroom presentation
Video/Theater analogy
Accreditation Requirements
(External Pressures)
Regional accreditation bodies often require training
and support unique to DL
Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS)
Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC)
Accreditation Requirements
Southern Association of Colleges and Schools
Faculty support services are appropriate and
specifically related to distance education.
Faculty who teach in distance education programs and
courses receive appropriate training.
Accreditation Requirements
Western Association of Schools and Colleges
The institution provides an ongoing program of appropriate
technical, design, and production support for participating
faculty members.
The institution provides to those responsible for program
development the orientation and training to help them become
proficient in the uses of the program’s technologies, including
potential changes in course design and management.
The institution provides to those responsible for working
directly with students the orientation and training to help them
become proficient in the uses of the technologies for these
purposes, including strategies for effective interaction.
University of Central Florida
•Public
•Large
•Metropolitan
•Multi-disciplinary
Programs
University of Central Florida
Combined (W & M) = almost 19% of SCH
Dynamic Environment
High growth
High demand for online courses
Required faculty development
1990’s: online education was new and no one had
experience
Existing models designed for faculty new to online
instruction
Current UCF Faculty Development
Webcourses IDV Essentials ADL5000 IDL6543
Essentials
Required to teach Required to teach Required to teach Required to design
“web-enhanced” lecture-capture/ existing and teach original
Face-to-face video streaming online/blended online/blended
course course course
Technology Focus Design and Pedagogy, Deeper Design and
Delivery Focus Logistics, Teaching Focus
Technology
5 hrs 8 hrs 35 hrs 80 hrs
Ad hoc training, open labs, and advanced topics sessions
The Challenges
New faculty being hired with prior online teaching
experience
Deans’ comments
Various models for online teaching
Templates, web-enhanced, document posting, synchronous,
asynchronous, SL, etc.
Limited use of online adjuncts who are not
geographically proximate
UCF-specific technologies, processes, and expectations
IDL6543 Overview
Flagship faculty development program for online
instruction
Award winning (Sloan-C Excellence in Faculty
Development 2003)
Online
Three key strategies
Consultations F2F
IDL6543 Objectives
Verbalize an informed opinion regarding the importance and
contribution to higher education made by "distributed learning."
Demonstrate understanding of the UCF course development process
for online courses (including timelines, preferred content formats,
and materials submission protocols).
Reflect on your existing teaching strategies and consider their
suitability for inclusion in your online course.
Collaborate with peers and facilitators (using online learning
technologies) to design an online course consistent with best
practices and protocols demonstrated in IDL6543.
Formulate student-centered learning objectives / course outcomes
for your online course.
Create assignments / activities for your online course based on your
learner outcomes.
IDL6543 Objectives
Develop an assessment strategy for your online course based on your
learner outcomes.
Assemble grading criteria for your online course based on your learner
outcomes and your assessment strategy.
Compose Web-based content for your online course based on your learner
outcomes.
Choose instructional graphics / media for your online course which
demonstrate visual literacy (e.g., constitutes an attractive, motivational,
instructional Web interface).
Develop a set of student interaction protocols (for e-mail, discussions, etc.)
to be followed in your online course.
Draft specific tactics for developing a "learning community" in your online
course based on the group work guidelines presented.
Devise a strategy for implementing "learner support" in your online course.
Proposed Solution
Competency-based instrument
Artifacts showing evidence of experience
Plan:
Determine evaluation criteria
Develop online submission form prototype
Create assessment rubric
Run a pilot test to validate instrument and establish
inter-rater reliability
Revise as necessary and implement
Instrument Development
Drafted by Tom based on Bb Greenhouse and QM
Reviewed and revised by ID team
IDs experienced as exemplary course reviewers
Criteria
Online Teaching Record
Previously taught online for a college or university?
For which institutions?
How many different courses?
How many sections of those courses have you taught
online and how many students were in each section?
Criteria
Online Teaching Record
What was the delivery mode of the majority of the
courses?
Have you won any awards for your online teaching?
How did you address accessibility issues for students
with disabilities in your online course(s)?
Have you ever been through an external assessment of
your online course(s), such as the Quality Matters
peer-review process?
Criteria
Learning Management System
Have you developed original online courses from scratch
or have you taught primarily from existing course
templates or content from a publisher?
What course management programs have you used to
teach online?
Which of the following technologies have you used in
your online courses?
Animation/Simulation, Audio/Podcasts, Blogs, Course
Statistics, Calendars, Chat, Discussions, E-mail, External Media
(e.g., DVD, CD-ROM), Glossary, Gradebook, Graphics/images,
Performance Dashboard, Quizzes, RSS Feeds, Self Test, Student
Presentations, Survey, Video, Whiteboard, Wikis, Other
Criteria
Professional Development
Have you completed any training or professional
development related to online design and/or teaching?
Please describe the professional development and
provide certificates/transcripts, if available.
Have you ever worked with an instructional designer
to develop an online course? Please describe how that
relationship worked.
Criteria
Strategies
Please provide detailed descriptions related to what you feel is
(are) your best online course(s). Areas you should consider
include:
Organization and navigation
Learner support strategies
Course learning objectives
Types of interactions and associated activities
Assessments
How you integrated technology
Important or creative design features
Course Design:
Please describe in detail your instructional design strategy, including
structural and media decisions.
Criteria
Interaction and Collaboration:
Describe course interaction and collaboration strategies.
Include use of synchronous tools (such as whiteboards,
chat, webcasting) and asynchronous tools (such as email
and discussions).
Also include how you addressed the different types of
interaction: student-to-student, student-to-instructor, and
student-to-content/technology.
Did you use online group projects?
Did you have netiquette expectations? How did all of these
strategies enhance student learning?
Criteria
Assessment:
Describe course assessment strategies. How did you ensure
that assignments aligned with course objectives? Did you
use rubrics? Did you use authentic assessment strategies
such as projects, portfolios or papers?
Did you use scaffolding strategies?
How did you try to ensure academic integrity in multiple
choice or other auto-graded tests? Did you use testing
centers or proctored exams?
How did you provide performance feedback to students?
Provide example assessments, if possible.
Criteria
Wrap-Up
Please provide a syllabus from one or more of your
online courses.
Is there any other information that you would like to
share that you feel would be helpful in evaluating your
readiness to teach online at UCF?
Demo
If available
Encouraged to
compose offlin
e
Screen Capture
Screen Capture
Interactive Activity
Go to the handout titled – Sample Output
Take a few minutes to go over the output
How would you evaluate this individual’s online
experience?
Why do you feel this way?
How would you justify your evaluation?
Document Output
Creates raw file of data
Example
Difficult to read
Reformatted Example
Sample Output
Rubric Development
Draft rubric has been developed
MS Excel File
Problematic in some areas: viewing entries
Demo
Challenges…PDF Version
Usability Testing
ID review team
Half testing with Excel
Half testing with PDF
Preliminary results
Goal of inter-rater reliability
Instructional Design Review
Considerations
Anonymity
Usability
Readability
Efficacy of point system
Weighted criteria?
Objective criterion referenced vs. subjective holistic
evaluation
EIS
Demo of EIS data
Outcomes
IDL6543 equivalency
Requirement to complete the Essentials course for
IDL6543 equivalency
Requirement to complete ADL5000 to deliver an
already-developed course
Requirement to complete specified elements/modules
E.g., Accessibility
Requirement to complete IDL6543 in its entirety
Provide additional materials (e.g., syllabus)
*Meet to learn “UCF specific” policies and procedures
Remediation Modules
Webcourses@UCF Essentials
ADL5000
https://obojobo.ucf.edu/
Individual consultation
Evaluation plan
Coordinated by CDL’s Research Initiative for Teaching
Effectiveness
Recruit small group of Faculty volunteers
Complete the form to the best of their abilities
Likely candidates new to UCF
Recruit Instructional Designer Volunteers
Review submissions and provide ratings
Establish inter-rater reliability
Usability testing of different methods
Validate the instrument as an effective tool
Current Status
Initial testing ongoing
Refinements underway
1 faculty member exempted from IDL
1 faculty member required to take IDL6543
Several more under review
Challenges
Recruiting faculty participants
System of tracking performance of “exempted”
faculty over time to see if quality results and
support needs are comparable to “trained” faculty
Compensation issues
Special Thanks
Contributors to Project:
Baiyun Chen, Ph.D., Instructional Designer
George Bradford, Ph.D., Instructional Designer
Questions / Comments / Feedback
Thomas Cavanagh, Ph.D., Asst. VP, Distributed
Learning
[email protected]
Linda Futch, Ed.D., Assoc. Dept. Head
[email protected]
Nancy Swenson, Instructional Designer
[email protected]