This document outlines a project to create a new academic integrity website for the University of Ontario Institute of Technology (UOIT) to prevent academic dishonesty. The website will contain learning modules, tip sheets for students and faculty, policies and forms, case studies, and other resources. Course instructors will be able to have students complete up to five learning modules that cover what academic integrity is, why it is important, and the consequences of dishonesty. Students can then print a certificate of completion to submit with assignments. The goals are to provide thorough education on academic integrity and analyze the effectiveness of the learning modules.
This paper details how early-capture survey data and continuous student feedback has informed practice within a social science department at the University of York. It will show how results from a survey of first year students at the very start of their degree course, loosely based on the ECAR studies in the US (Smith and Caruso 2010), have fed into departmental teaching strategy and provided a solid knowledge-base for academic staff to understand the way students engage with ICT and their expectations of how technology-enhanced learning should be included within degree programmes. This increase in understanding is hypothesised to be a contributory factor to the high buy-in from academic staff in the use of learning technologies within this department. Presented at ALT-C 2012.
Interim report and main findings, by Lasakova, Bajzikova & Sassogaihe
Interim report and main findings, by Lasakova, Bajzikova & Sasso. Governance and Adaptation to Innovative Modes of the Higher Education Provision Project
Exploring pedagogical culture for accessibility education in Computing ScienceDavid Sloan
What do we know about effective methods for teaching accessibility? This presentation given at the W4A conference in Montreal shares initial findings from a review of published work on pedagogy and accessibility, with a focus on computing science.
This paper details how early-capture survey data and continuous student feedback has informed practice within a social science department at the University of York. It will show how results from a survey of first year students at the very start of their degree course, loosely based on the ECAR studies in the US (Smith and Caruso 2010), have fed into departmental teaching strategy and provided a solid knowledge-base for academic staff to understand the way students engage with ICT and their expectations of how technology-enhanced learning should be included within degree programmes. This increase in understanding is hypothesised to be a contributory factor to the high buy-in from academic staff in the use of learning technologies within this department. Presented at ALT-C 2012.
Interim report and main findings, by Lasakova, Bajzikova & Sassogaihe
Interim report and main findings, by Lasakova, Bajzikova & Sasso. Governance and Adaptation to Innovative Modes of the Higher Education Provision Project
Exploring pedagogical culture for accessibility education in Computing ScienceDavid Sloan
What do we know about effective methods for teaching accessibility? This presentation given at the W4A conference in Montreal shares initial findings from a review of published work on pedagogy and accessibility, with a focus on computing science.
Promoting Effective Teaching and Learning Ecosystems via Research Proven Prac...Tanya Joosten
ELI Leadership Seminar, 2016, San Antonio TX
The ELI Leadership Seminar, "Promoting a Sustainable and Effective Teaching and Learning Ecosystem via Research Proven Practice," is an extended learning opportunity threaded throughout the annual meeting program. The goals for this seminar are to:
Enable quality teaching and learning through evidence-based faculty development to diffuse proven instructional interventions and practices
Discover ways to gather evidence using a research model for online learning, including key research questions driving inquiry
Explore different research designs (experimental and survey with data mining) for studying teaching and learning innovations
Develop a research plan for your program or institution that will assist in identifying effective instructional and institutional practices in blended and online learning
Identify potential methods of effectively engaging faculty in teaching and researching innovations in student learning
Learn about institutional mechanisms that can impact quality in teaching and learning, particularly in blended and online environments
Enable participants to network with peers interested in promoting effective teaching and learning through research on blended and online programming at universities
Participants, both new and experienced, will benefit from peer interaction and the opportunity to network and engage with leaders during small group discussions. Participants will meet with, share with, and learn from a cohort of peers from a wide range of positions supporting teaching and learning from different types of higher education institutions.
Conducting Research on Blended and Online Education: A Research ToolkitTanya Joosten
An ELI Short Course delivered on May 16th, 2016.
This session consists of practice-based research planning activities to help participants prepare for conducting research at the course or program level. Specifically, we will utilize the distance education research toolkit developed by the National Research Center for Distance Education and Technological Advancements (DETA) to guide the development of research plans for blended and online learning. Attendees will walk away with a research agenda and the necessary tools to help them conduct research on their campus as part of the National DETA Research Center initiative. The DETA Center seeks to identify and evaluate effective course and institutional practices in online learning (including competency-based education) for underrepresented learners.
Objectives:
After participating in this webinar, participants will be able to:
Develop research questions
Clarify variables and measures
Identify data gathering techniques
Consider other actionable milestones necessary to conduct rigorous research
http://www.educause.edu/events/eli-webinar-conducting-research-blended-and-online-education
Supporting international research students Rob Daley
Keynote Presentation given at the "ESRC IAA Impact Workshop – Towards maximising international PhD students' experience"
School of Education, University of Glasgow, March 29th 2017.
Next steps for excellence in the quality of e-learning (EADTU Paris masterclass)Jon Rosewell
Overview of Excellence NEXT project for quality assurance in e-learning, presented as part of masterclass at EADTU conference, Paris, 2013. [http://conference.eadtu.eu/]
This presentation investigates the characteristics of an online graduate degree program in library and information studies (LIS), and its unusual success in retaining students to degree conferral. It has been reported for more than a dozen years that attrition rates for distance education programs are higher than for those programs in which instruction is delivered face to face. In the present study an online master's degree program in LIS that has maintained an overall retention rate higher than 90 percent over five successive entering classes is examined for explanatory characteristics. These characteristics are described and compared with attributes that the literature relates to retention success. Mapping the characteristics of our LIS program to the factors for retention requires description of specific implementations of the program design. We detail the factors and activities recommended for student retention and provide a summary of the activities inherent in the implementation our successful LIS program. Additional question for investigation are identified.
Online Proctoring: How NOVA Ensures Academic Integrity (Webinar)ProctorU
Dr. William Preston Davis with Northern Virginia Community College (NOVA) has overseen a program that served over 21,000 online students in 2011 and will share what he's learned about distance education. Dr. Davis will discuss how online proctoring has helped shape his school's web-based pedagogy and give details about the important part that testing plays in their program. The discussion will also include how online proctoring with ProctorU fills an important instructional need in their distance learning curriculum.
Promoting Effective Teaching and Learning Ecosystems via Research Proven Prac...Tanya Joosten
ELI Leadership Seminar, 2016, San Antonio TX
The ELI Leadership Seminar, "Promoting a Sustainable and Effective Teaching and Learning Ecosystem via Research Proven Practice," is an extended learning opportunity threaded throughout the annual meeting program. The goals for this seminar are to:
Enable quality teaching and learning through evidence-based faculty development to diffuse proven instructional interventions and practices
Discover ways to gather evidence using a research model for online learning, including key research questions driving inquiry
Explore different research designs (experimental and survey with data mining) for studying teaching and learning innovations
Develop a research plan for your program or institution that will assist in identifying effective instructional and institutional practices in blended and online learning
Identify potential methods of effectively engaging faculty in teaching and researching innovations in student learning
Learn about institutional mechanisms that can impact quality in teaching and learning, particularly in blended and online environments
Enable participants to network with peers interested in promoting effective teaching and learning through research on blended and online programming at universities
Participants, both new and experienced, will benefit from peer interaction and the opportunity to network and engage with leaders during small group discussions. Participants will meet with, share with, and learn from a cohort of peers from a wide range of positions supporting teaching and learning from different types of higher education institutions.
Conducting Research on Blended and Online Education: A Research ToolkitTanya Joosten
An ELI Short Course delivered on May 16th, 2016.
This session consists of practice-based research planning activities to help participants prepare for conducting research at the course or program level. Specifically, we will utilize the distance education research toolkit developed by the National Research Center for Distance Education and Technological Advancements (DETA) to guide the development of research plans for blended and online learning. Attendees will walk away with a research agenda and the necessary tools to help them conduct research on their campus as part of the National DETA Research Center initiative. The DETA Center seeks to identify and evaluate effective course and institutional practices in online learning (including competency-based education) for underrepresented learners.
Objectives:
After participating in this webinar, participants will be able to:
Develop research questions
Clarify variables and measures
Identify data gathering techniques
Consider other actionable milestones necessary to conduct rigorous research
http://www.educause.edu/events/eli-webinar-conducting-research-blended-and-online-education
Supporting international research students Rob Daley
Keynote Presentation given at the "ESRC IAA Impact Workshop – Towards maximising international PhD students' experience"
School of Education, University of Glasgow, March 29th 2017.
Next steps for excellence in the quality of e-learning (EADTU Paris masterclass)Jon Rosewell
Overview of Excellence NEXT project for quality assurance in e-learning, presented as part of masterclass at EADTU conference, Paris, 2013. [http://conference.eadtu.eu/]
This presentation investigates the characteristics of an online graduate degree program in library and information studies (LIS), and its unusual success in retaining students to degree conferral. It has been reported for more than a dozen years that attrition rates for distance education programs are higher than for those programs in which instruction is delivered face to face. In the present study an online master's degree program in LIS that has maintained an overall retention rate higher than 90 percent over five successive entering classes is examined for explanatory characteristics. These characteristics are described and compared with attributes that the literature relates to retention success. Mapping the characteristics of our LIS program to the factors for retention requires description of specific implementations of the program design. We detail the factors and activities recommended for student retention and provide a summary of the activities inherent in the implementation our successful LIS program. Additional question for investigation are identified.
Online Proctoring: How NOVA Ensures Academic Integrity (Webinar)ProctorU
Dr. William Preston Davis with Northern Virginia Community College (NOVA) has overseen a program that served over 21,000 online students in 2011 and will share what he's learned about distance education. Dr. Davis will discuss how online proctoring has helped shape his school's web-based pedagogy and give details about the important part that testing plays in their program. The discussion will also include how online proctoring with ProctorU fills an important instructional need in their distance learning curriculum.
15.02.2016. 02. Вшивцева А.С. Стрептококкозы. Доклады студенческого научного кружка (СНК), 5-е, заседание. Кафедра инфекционных болезней. Южно-Уральский государственный медицинский университет. г. Челябинск.
Data driven innovation for student success (Studiosity Symposium 2017)Studiosity.com
Empowering cross-institutional collaboration to drive holistic approaches to student success that leverage the power of student centered analytics and prepare our graduates for the new world of work
Keynote:
Associate Professor Jessica Vanderlelie
Innovative Research Universities Vice Chancellors’ Fellow, Australian Learning & Teaching Fellow
This essay is North Central University course EL-7001-8 assignment 8: introduction to E-Learning. The aim is to introduce Ed.D students to principles and philosophies of e-learning as well as challenges of educators working in the field. The document is written in APA format, includes references, and has been graded by a facilitator.
ABLE - the NTU Student Dashboard - University of DerbyEd Foster
implementing a university wide learning analytics system.
Presentation Overview:
- Introduction
- Developing the NTU Student Dashboard
- Transitioning from pilot phase to whole institution roll-out
- Embedding the resource into working practices
- Future development
Addressing and Implementing Effective Methods for Online Teaching and TrainingAllison Selby
http://alliselby.edublogs.org/
Presenting different methodologies we use for addressing and implementing effective methods for online teaching and training. Our goal is really to create significant learning experiences for our students and we want to keep them engaged in learning the material. We want to create a high energy environment for learning in the course room and allow our students to consider how these concepts that we are presenting to them in the course can be applied to their professional and personal environments. The Web 2.0 tools encourages to students to share information and knowledge within the course. This builds community, team skills, peer interactions. As students become validated by their peers and share knowledge and information, it increases their self-concept. Web 2.0 content generated by our students and faculty include welcome videos, project and feedback assessment, demonstrations, and student presentations for both end of term projects and client presentations.
Presented at Sloan International Conference, Orlando, FL., 2013
Assessing OER impact across varied organisations and learners: experiences fr...Beck Pitt
This presentation was co-authored by Tim Coughlan (Nottingham), Beck Pitt (OU), Patrick McAndrew (OU) and Nassim Ebrahimi (Anne Arundel).
It was presented at OER13, Nottingham, UK which took place 26-27 March 2013.
Assessing OER impact across varied organisations and learners: experiences fr...OER Hub
This presentation was co-authored by Tim Coughlan (Nottingham), Beck Pitt (OU), Patrick McAndrew (OU) and Nassim Ebrahimi (Anne Arundel).
It was presented at OER13, Nottingham, UK which took place 26-27 March 2013.
This is a North Central University course (EL 7002-8), Introduction to E-Learning . It is written in APA format, has been graded by an instructor (A), and includes references. Most higher-education assignments are submitted to turnitin, so remember to paraphrase. Let us begin.
Students First 2020 - Creating a comprehensive student support ecosystemStudiosity.com
As we continue this year's online Symposium series, we were joined by Professor Angela Hill, DVC Education at ECU and Professor Rowena Harper, Director, Centre for Learning and Teaching at ECU, who generously shared Edith Cowan's in-depth and dedicated approach to student support.
Session Chair: Prof Judyth Sachs, Chief Academic Officer, Studiosity
CLIR staff present the results of a 2011 survey of student engagement with projects funded through the Cataloging Hidden Special Collections and Archives program. See also:
http://www.clir.org/hiddencollections/student_survey_results.html
Similar to Creating an Academic Integrity Website1 (20)
1. Creating an Academic Integrity Website
Vanessa Theophille, Project Assistant | Dr. Alyson King, Ph.D. Assistant Professor – Social Sciences & Humanities, Program Director - Community Development & Policy Studies | University of Ontario Institute of
Technology
Purpose
To create a new and accessible academic
integrity website for UOIT in order to prevent
academic dishonesty.
Background
Academic integrity may be defined as the “intentional participation in
deceptive practices regarding one’s academic work or the work of
another.” (Faucher, & Caves, 2009). This may include various forms of
cheating such as plagiarism, misrepresentation, falsification, re-
submitting assignments, violating safety regulations, and so on (2015-
2016 Academic Calendar, 2015).
Project Overview
This new website will contain various teaching and learning resources
for both students and faculty. Course instructors will have the option to
have their students complete any or all of the five learning modules
and complete a quiz at the end. Students may then submit a
certificate of completion with their grade as proof that they understand
UOIT’s standards regarding academic integrity. After completing these
modules, students should have a throughout understanding of what
academic integrity is, why it is important, and the consequences or
academic dishonesty.
Website Features
Tip Sheets
• Two tip sheets to
help guide students
and faculty in
preventing
academic
dishonesty
Modules
• This website will
feature five learning
modules which can
be used by course
instructors in class.
Each module will
end with a quiz and
the option to print a
certificate of
completion with a
grade
Resources
• Easily accessible
policies and forms
• Case studies for
graduate students
and faculty
members
• Extra resources for
students and faculty
Home Page
Faculty Tip Sheet
Student Tip Sheet
Module Examples
Next Steps
• Implementation of modules and quizzes to classrooms
• Analyze the effectiveness of the learning modules
Works Cited
Faucher, D., & Caves, S. (2009). Academic Dishonesty:
Innovative cheating techniques and the detection and
prevention of them. Teaching and Learning in Nursing, 4, 37-
41. DOI: http://www.jtln.org/article/S1557-3087(08)00082-
6/abstract?cc=y=.
2015-2016 Undergraduate Academic Calendar and Course
Catalogue. (2015, June 1). Retrieved August 10, 2015.