This document discusses emerging social trends and their implications for instructional and institutional effectiveness. It notes that students today expect good communication and connection with their instructors and classmates to feel engaged in learning. Data shows students' heavy use of social media and mobile devices. The document urges educators to provide open access, create authentic learning experiences, develop students for the 21st century, and connect students through open communication and rich media while using technology to facilitate pedagogical strategies rather than being the primary strategy.
Session 94: Social Media “Strategery” & Guidance for Advising with @matt_rupert - Follow #SMadv & http://bit.ly/smadv - Monday (10/7) 3:15-4:15 pm in 255 C
Emerging Effective Practices: The Pathway to Student SuccessTanya Joosten
Featured presentation.
Presented at #OITSYMP15 at Delta State.
Higher education is undergoing a rapid transformation due to changes in societal interests and values. As educators, we must be responsive to these changes and look to develop strategies to best meet the needs of our students inside and outside of the classroom. We are bombarded with new technologies and practices to aid us in our efforts, including blended learning, learner analytics, MOOCs, open education resources (OER), mobile technologies, social media, gamification, and more. How do we decide what is right for us and our students? I will discuss considerations derived from these trends that will help us design our future.
Guided Pathways and iPASS: Supporting Student Success from Start to FinishHobsons
Stella and Charles Guttman Community College, the newest community college in the City University of New York, is an equity-driven, guided learning pathways institution. Having just completed our fourth year, Guttman’s educational model is proving to be successful in helping students make timely progress towards degree completion; our two- and three-year graduation rates are well above the national average.
Faculty-student interaction is a cornerstone of the college experience, and one of the main components of student engagement. How has this interaction changed in the age of social media, and how are faculty supposed to keep up? New research sheds some light! Learn how you can effectively, confidently communicate with students in an ever-changing communication environment.
These slides are from a keynote address delivered in April 2017. If you have any questions about the content, please contact me.
www.lizgross.net
Session 94: Social Media “Strategery” & Guidance for Advising with @matt_rupert - Follow #SMadv & http://bit.ly/smadv - Monday (10/7) 3:15-4:15 pm in 255 C
Emerging Effective Practices: The Pathway to Student SuccessTanya Joosten
Featured presentation.
Presented at #OITSYMP15 at Delta State.
Higher education is undergoing a rapid transformation due to changes in societal interests and values. As educators, we must be responsive to these changes and look to develop strategies to best meet the needs of our students inside and outside of the classroom. We are bombarded with new technologies and practices to aid us in our efforts, including blended learning, learner analytics, MOOCs, open education resources (OER), mobile technologies, social media, gamification, and more. How do we decide what is right for us and our students? I will discuss considerations derived from these trends that will help us design our future.
Guided Pathways and iPASS: Supporting Student Success from Start to FinishHobsons
Stella and Charles Guttman Community College, the newest community college in the City University of New York, is an equity-driven, guided learning pathways institution. Having just completed our fourth year, Guttman’s educational model is proving to be successful in helping students make timely progress towards degree completion; our two- and three-year graduation rates are well above the national average.
Faculty-student interaction is a cornerstone of the college experience, and one of the main components of student engagement. How has this interaction changed in the age of social media, and how are faculty supposed to keep up? New research sheds some light! Learn how you can effectively, confidently communicate with students in an ever-changing communication environment.
These slides are from a keynote address delivered in April 2017. If you have any questions about the content, please contact me.
www.lizgross.net
Respondents in a 2017 Gallup poll said they have little confidence in the public schools today with only 36 percent having a “great deal” or “quite a lot” of confidence in the schools. While the rising tide of mediocrity so often mentioned in educational research pushes for more funding— smaller class sizes and higher teacher salaries, this research and that of others shows money may not be the leading factor in success in a scholastic media environment. When 310 of the most successful scholastic broadcast, yearbook, newspaper and online programs were examined, the qualifications of the teachers, the location of the school and the racial diversity of the school were more likely to predict success than per pupil revenues or low student/teacher ratios.
This presentation is intended for UPCEA members who are involved in helping their institutions determine whether to offer or continue to offer MOOCs. It draws on the experience of UC Irvine, an early member of Coursera, which has over ten years of experience in OpenCourseWare (OCW) and Open Educational Resources (OER). To begin, the presentation establishes the context for a full understanding of MOOCS, why they developed, what impact they have had so far, and what their effect might be on higher education and the world, but absent the hype and hyperbole that characterizes current discussions around MOOCS. The advantages and disadvantages of being involved with MOOCs and some strategic reasons to engage in MOOCs will be presented, using illustrations from the UCI experience.
SUNY Broome is one of 64 campuses in the State University of New York System and a new member of Achieving the Dream. “Joining Achieving the Dream was important for us,” said Heather Darrow, Staff Associate for Student Retention. “We are striving to become a college that is proactive and not reactive. I think that’s why we joined when we did - and why we invested in Starfish. Both investments demonstrate our administration’s commitment to student success.” SUNY Broome focused on early alert flags and Kudos in their initial implementation, and now they are eager to do more. They are training faculty, building automated workflows around flags, and developing ways to encourage participation both within the faculty and for those in non-academic roles. This Webinar will focus on advice and “lessons learned” in the early stages of implementing the Starfish platform at a community college. As Heather Darrow said, “In the beginning it seemed very abstract – I know it can be hard to conceptualize how Starfish will work. But I figured it out, and others can too. I look forward to helping other schools!” Speakers: Heather Darrow, Staff Associate for Student Retention Michelle Beatty, Online Student Advisor
Increasing Retention Through an Integrated Student Experience ApproachHobsons
Northern Essex Community College was designated as a Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI) in 2002. Early in 2014, the college initiated a small pilot program to implement Starfish Early Alert. NECC has experienced marked success in its campus rollout and expansion throughout the implementation process, helped by initiatives that drive awareness and deliver training and support among campus constituents. The school’s efforts have earned it a 2015 “Rising Star” Award from Starfish by Hobsons and a finalist placement in the associates category for Excelencia in Education. NECC will also be featured in a national report by the Alliance of HSI Educators. This webinar will focus on effective implementation strategies, student success and retention outcomes, lessons learned and NECC’s plans for an integrated student experience using Starfish to increase student retention and success.
High School and Community College Partnerships - Bridging the Gap to Higher EdHobsons
Relationships between high schools and local colleges can be a win-win for both sides of the fence. In this webinar, Nancy Daves (former College Counselor at San Jacinto College), Suzie Thomas (Director of Student Personnel Services at Clear Creek ISD), and Dr. Pam Campbell (Assistant Vice Chancellor for Educational Partnerships at San Jacinto College) discuss the positive impact of the relationship between Clear Creek ISD and San Jacinto College near Houston, TX. Learn how the relationship formed, how it helped ease students' transition to higher education, and get tips for beginning or enhancing a similar relationship in your community.
Naviance Summer Institute 2015 Product ForumNaviance
The product forum at the 2015 Naviance Summer Institute highlighted Hobsons' commitment to bridging the divide between college eligibility and college readiness.
Opportunities to Engage First Year Students at Community CollegesHobsons
As part of the Student Success and Support Program (SSSP) led by the Chancellor’s Office, Los Medanos College began implementing tools from the Starfish Enterprise Success Platform – specifically, early alert and degree planning – in 2015. In this Webinar, you’ll learn about their recipe for implementing student success technologies within a statewide initiative.
Respondents in a 2017 Gallup poll said they have little confidence in the public schools today with only 36 percent having a “great deal” or “quite a lot” of confidence in the schools. While the rising tide of mediocrity so often mentioned in educational research pushes for more funding— smaller class sizes and higher teacher salaries, this research and that of others shows money may not be the leading factor in success in a scholastic media environment. When 310 of the most successful scholastic broadcast, yearbook, newspaper and online programs were examined, the qualifications of the teachers, the location of the school and the racial diversity of the school were more likely to predict success than per pupil revenues or low student/teacher ratios.
This presentation is intended for UPCEA members who are involved in helping their institutions determine whether to offer or continue to offer MOOCs. It draws on the experience of UC Irvine, an early member of Coursera, which has over ten years of experience in OpenCourseWare (OCW) and Open Educational Resources (OER). To begin, the presentation establishes the context for a full understanding of MOOCS, why they developed, what impact they have had so far, and what their effect might be on higher education and the world, but absent the hype and hyperbole that characterizes current discussions around MOOCS. The advantages and disadvantages of being involved with MOOCs and some strategic reasons to engage in MOOCs will be presented, using illustrations from the UCI experience.
SUNY Broome is one of 64 campuses in the State University of New York System and a new member of Achieving the Dream. “Joining Achieving the Dream was important for us,” said Heather Darrow, Staff Associate for Student Retention. “We are striving to become a college that is proactive and not reactive. I think that’s why we joined when we did - and why we invested in Starfish. Both investments demonstrate our administration’s commitment to student success.” SUNY Broome focused on early alert flags and Kudos in their initial implementation, and now they are eager to do more. They are training faculty, building automated workflows around flags, and developing ways to encourage participation both within the faculty and for those in non-academic roles. This Webinar will focus on advice and “lessons learned” in the early stages of implementing the Starfish platform at a community college. As Heather Darrow said, “In the beginning it seemed very abstract – I know it can be hard to conceptualize how Starfish will work. But I figured it out, and others can too. I look forward to helping other schools!” Speakers: Heather Darrow, Staff Associate for Student Retention Michelle Beatty, Online Student Advisor
Increasing Retention Through an Integrated Student Experience ApproachHobsons
Northern Essex Community College was designated as a Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI) in 2002. Early in 2014, the college initiated a small pilot program to implement Starfish Early Alert. NECC has experienced marked success in its campus rollout and expansion throughout the implementation process, helped by initiatives that drive awareness and deliver training and support among campus constituents. The school’s efforts have earned it a 2015 “Rising Star” Award from Starfish by Hobsons and a finalist placement in the associates category for Excelencia in Education. NECC will also be featured in a national report by the Alliance of HSI Educators. This webinar will focus on effective implementation strategies, student success and retention outcomes, lessons learned and NECC’s plans for an integrated student experience using Starfish to increase student retention and success.
High School and Community College Partnerships - Bridging the Gap to Higher EdHobsons
Relationships between high schools and local colleges can be a win-win for both sides of the fence. In this webinar, Nancy Daves (former College Counselor at San Jacinto College), Suzie Thomas (Director of Student Personnel Services at Clear Creek ISD), and Dr. Pam Campbell (Assistant Vice Chancellor for Educational Partnerships at San Jacinto College) discuss the positive impact of the relationship between Clear Creek ISD and San Jacinto College near Houston, TX. Learn how the relationship formed, how it helped ease students' transition to higher education, and get tips for beginning or enhancing a similar relationship in your community.
Naviance Summer Institute 2015 Product ForumNaviance
The product forum at the 2015 Naviance Summer Institute highlighted Hobsons' commitment to bridging the divide between college eligibility and college readiness.
Opportunities to Engage First Year Students at Community CollegesHobsons
As part of the Student Success and Support Program (SSSP) led by the Chancellor’s Office, Los Medanos College began implementing tools from the Starfish Enterprise Success Platform – specifically, early alert and degree planning – in 2015. In this Webinar, you’ll learn about their recipe for implementing student success technologies within a statewide initiative.
Keynote: Emerging Social Trends: Strategies and Best Practices for Teaching a...Tanya Joosten
Keynote: Emerging Social Trends: Strategies and Best Practices for Teaching and Learning
Dr. Tanya Joosten
Presented at Transformative Teaching and Technology Conference at St. Norbert College.
June 2, 2015
http://www.snc.edu/it/t3/2015/
Presented at the Flexible Learning Conference, Madison Area Technical College
Higher education is undergoing a rapid transformation due to changes in societal interests and values. As educators, we must be responsive to these changes and look to develop strategies to best meet the needs of our students inside and outside of the classroom. We are bombarded with new technologies and practices to aid us in our efforts, including blended learning, learner analytics, MOOCs, open education resources (OER), mobile technologies, social media, gamification, and more. How do we decide what is right for us and our students? I will discuss considerations derived from these trends that will help us design our future.
#FlexLearning2015
SPOTLIGHT SESSION - SOCIAL MEDIA AND TRENDS: STRATEGIES AND BEST PRACTICES FO...Tanya Joosten
Spotlight session presented at #UWDTL, the annual Distance Teaching and Learning conference in Madison, WI on 8.13.2015.
Higher education is undergoing a rapid transformation due to changes in societal interests and values. As educators, we must be responsive to these changes and look to develop strategies to best meet the needs of our students inside and outside of the classroom. We are bombarded with new technologies and practices to aid us in our efforts, but how do we decide what is right for us and our students? In particular, social media tools are changing the way that people across the globe communicate, share ideas and build networks. They offer media characteristics not offered by other learning technologies and are further transforming our values and how we think about student learning. This session will explore pedagogical considerations derived from these trends that will help us foster our digital future through the use of social media.
"Taking advantage of social media in your courses"Tanya Joosten
Presented at the University of Nebraska WorldWide Innovation in Pedagogy and Technology
Abstract
Tanya Joosten, author of Social Media for Educators, will share guidance on how you can effectively use social media in your course to 1.) provide better support for students through amplified communication, 2.) curate and/or create rich and current content to increase student satisfaction, and 3.) develop greater opportunities for interactivity and feedback to improve student learning. Specifically, attendees will design a learning module using backwards design while considering and taking advantage of the characteristics and functionality of social media. We will consider how social media can assist us in providing our students an experience that facilitates multiple technological literacies to prepare them for professional life.
What would a leader in higher education tweet? Ready or not, social media use by college students is skyrocketing, challenging student affairs educators to meet them where they are. To explore this phenomenon, this Region VI Research Grant awarded study looked at sixteen senior-level Student Affairs administrators and their leadership practices on social media over a six-month period. This presentation was offered at both NASPA and ACPA national conferences, where attendees received a leadership framework and digital decision-making model based upon the results of the study.
We all have good and bad thoughts from time to time and situation to situation. We are bombarded daily with spiraling thoughts(both negative and positive) creating all-consuming feel , making us difficult to manage with associated suffering. Good thoughts are like our Mob Signal (Positive thought) amidst noise(negative thought) in the atmosphere. Negative thoughts like noise outweigh positive thoughts. These thoughts often create unwanted confusion, trouble, stress and frustration in our mind as well as chaos in our physical world. Negative thoughts are also known as “distorted thinking”.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
This is a presentation by Dada Robert in a Your Skill Boost masterclass organised by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan (EFSS) on Saturday, the 25th and Sunday, the 26th of May 2024.
He discussed the concept of quality improvement, emphasizing its applicability to various aspects of life, including personal, project, and program improvements. He defined quality as doing the right thing at the right time in the right way to achieve the best possible results and discussed the concept of the "gap" between what we know and what we do, and how this gap represents the areas we need to improve. He explained the scientific approach to quality improvement, which involves systematic performance analysis, testing and learning, and implementing change ideas. He also highlighted the importance of client focus and a team approach to quality improvement.
Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology:
Ethnobotany in herbal drug evaluation,
Impact of Ethnobotany in traditional medicine,
New development in herbals,
Bio-prospecting tools for drug discovery,
Role of Ethnopharmacology in drug evaluation,
Reverse Pharmacology.
Welcome to TechSoup New Member Orientation and Q&A (May 2024).pdfTechSoup
In this webinar you will learn how your organization can access TechSoup's wide variety of product discount and donation programs. From hardware to software, we'll give you a tour of the tools available to help your nonprofit with productivity, collaboration, financial management, donor tracking, security, and more.
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
The Art Pastor's Guide to Sabbath | Steve ThomasonSteve Thomason
What is the purpose of the Sabbath Law in the Torah. It is interesting to compare how the context of the law shifts from Exodus to Deuteronomy. Who gets to rest, and why?
How to Create Map Views in the Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
The map views are useful for providing a geographical representation of data. They allow users to visualize and analyze the data in a more intuitive manner.
45. According to a survey by Joosten (2009), students
reported that they need good (67%) and
frequent communication (90%) with
their instructor and good communication
with their classmates (75%). They also reported
that they need to feel connected to
learn (80%) (http://tinyurl.com/yafu8qz).
47. According to PEW Internet study, “Teens who
participated in focus groups for this study said
that they view email as something you
use to talk to ‘old people,’ institutions,
or to send complex instructions to large groups “
(http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2005/Teen
s-and-Technology.aspx?r=1).
48. 95.1% of 18- and 19-year-olds use social media,
primarily Facebook on a daily basis (Salaway, et al.,
2009)
96% of undergraduates reported using Facebook
(Smith & Caruso, 2010)
43% of undergraduate use Twitter (Smith & Caruso,
2010)
90% use mobile devices to receive and send text
messages (Smith, 2010), over 1600 a month
(Neilson, 2010)
92% of college-aged students watch YouTube
(Moore, 2011)
54. Tips…
Let the data drive you
Provide open and continuous access
Create opportunities for authentic,
richer experiences
Develop students for the 21st century
Connect students to you, the course,
each other, and the world
Don’t chase shiny balls
66. An array of
journeys to
degree
Degree
Open
Access
Flex
Blended
Self-
paced
Traditional
Online
Providing you more
access and a choice in
planning your flexible
journey to degree
through –blended, open
access, flex, self-paced,
and traditional online –
courses and program.
67. “A virtual place where
people share; everybody and
anybody can share anything
anywhere anytime”
(Joosten, 2012, p. 6).
72. Words, Voice, Eye
Contact, Hand
Gestures, Body
Movements,
Posture, Clothes
Eye Contact,
Nodding, Hand
Gestures, Posture
73. ? Words, Text or
Voice, Emoticons,
Eye Contact, Hand
Gestures, Body
Movements,
Posture, Clothes
? Words, Text or
Voice, Emoticons,
Eye Contact, Hand
Gestures, Body
Movements,
Posture, Clothes
Editor's Notes
Higher education is undergoing a rapid transformation due to changes in societal interests and values.
As educators, we must be responsive to these changes and look to develop strategies to best meet the needs of our students inside and outside of the classroom.
We are bombarded with new technologies and practices to aid us in our efforts, including blended learning, learner analytics, MOOCs, open education resources (OER), mobile technologies, social media, gamification, and more.
How do we decide what is right for us and our students? Lots of time we focus on the tech and the tools and rather our underlying values and overarching purpose.
I will discuss considerations derived from these trends that will help us design our future.
www.youtube.com/v/KJS46y7pa_k
Full disclosure
Technology is something great that can help facilitate positive change in our World
However, technology is just the medium. You must chose the right medium and use it appropriately to have the desired impact that you want.
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www.youtube.com/v/KJS46y7pa_k
OPEN – in the 90’s things were open (public websites), then we closed them – things needed to be privileged and secured (CMS, Intranet, email, VPN, AOL, etc), now we are opening them up again.
The day Facebook toppled Google
Information is no longer privileged by sages or behind closed doors that require keys
Where they get information? Not behind closed doors.
Status leveling
Democratizing
MOOCs, OER, YouTube, Social Media, Google -- Resources at our finger tips, in a instant
Everyone has access to these technologies, to these knowledge-building activities
Another trend is around access and equality –
Access - tech access/digital divide (broadband, software, hardware/device), disability access, $
Ubiquitous, Mobile, Access, Bandwidth, Phones, tablets, laptops, push – instant – info, support, etc
There is the expectation that we (students, staff, junior-mid level faculty and instructors) will be able to “do” anything online we want to no matter, seamlessly – without thought of their bandwidth, hardware, software, location or time….or ability and for free…
Internet connection speed – Tell story of Comm Tech, Dial-up, Broadband, New Defined Broadband, to 3G to 4G
Now Verizon is making money off of data – unlimited data is gone. No one uses their minutes anymore.
Platform of device, iOS or Windows
We want to play all files despite the file format like Flash
Anyone else make voice over flash-based presentations – not cool Apple, not cool
Want we do it from our mobile device, not matter where we are…
Qualcomm is working with governments all over the world to ensure that wireless towers are build in 3rd world countries
I used to use this clip in one of my classes from Diane Sawyer talking about the digital divide…he is a farmer making $80 a week but has a mobile phone
Wireless Reach programs offers
Women in Entrepreneurship program offers women the opportunity to start business from their phone
Higher education is not longer about weeding out a certain population of students…Russ Polin, WCET, reminded me on Twitter recently that this was an important message
Our role is to help students grow and flourish, to be successful
In providing open and continuous access based on the expectations society has put on our students, we need to change the way we think about things and focus on how to bring down the walls rather than how do we compartmentalize, control, build walls, and charge for entry.
Instructional materials need to be accessible – open and free and accessible regardinless of the device, bandwidth, time, and disAbility
In bringing down the walls think of open webspaces, open physical spaces, free access, less technology hurdles, more bridges, greater seamlessness, and building transparency….
Support OER or digital content and the creation and sharing of open textbooks. Reading for class should not be privileged. Information is not scarce. Youtube, a social media, and a variety of sources have open, free information to be curated for students.
Open content for others to use.
2. Providing faculty with a $5,000 summer stipend to create an open textbook could save students $60,000 in one semester.
Let’s student drive and curate content. These are 21st century skills that they will need in the workplace not matter whether or not their job exists today.
Transition – focus not only on what is happening inside of the classroom, but what is happening outside of the classroom.
1. OER Study
Independent samples t-tests using OER as the grouping variable illustrates OER classes reported significantly higher self-perceived learning (M = 37.29, SD = 7.79) as compared to courses that did no use OER content (M=32.41, SD = 6.58), t(80) = 2.86, p < .01.
Additionally, OER courses reported significantly higher self-perceived satisfaction in Ginkgotree (M = 31.06, SD = 4.72) as compared to non-OER content courses (M = 27.34, SD = 4.75), t(80) = 3.404, p < .01.
Part of this comes through providing open and continuous access to so many things…in so many ways….
4. Incentive and support (through libraries) open publishing
4. The James A. Gibson Library is cancelling our subscription to a package of 1,363 journals from Wiley-Blackwell effective December 31, 2014 due to financial constraints. The cumulative impact of annual price increases from scholarly publishers, coupled with the higher American dollar, make it impossible for the Library to maintain this subscription.
Incentivize the capturing of tacit knowledge. Provide free domains for faculty and students to blog and develop digital identities. Please don’t brand them ;)
Again, embrace differences, multiple identities, individuality, and creativity…
Share your materials as an instructor, start a blog! Open up your course to the public, put your digital content on YouTube.
Support your students public displays of their work, building their digital literacy skills, helping them document what they learned in class and showing it to future employers.
2. Encourage technical an process systems where courses stay open for the life of a students’ tenure at the university. Provide students access to their content and work, or, allow them to take it with them.
3. Offer free courses to potential or incoming students. Offer free courses in specialized research areas. Offer a free course sharing multiple disciplinary approaches, even interdisciplinary research on world problems.
2. LMS research data – students expect access to digital materials for…ever.
3. Free by Christopher
Richard Culatta
Another societal trend is this idea of -- authenticity or realness – We don’t want the project self, we want the true self…
Social presence – immediacy and intimacy – want to feel connected -- engagement
We have come to a time when we as a society value emotions, emotional intelligence. You should show that you care. You can be vulnerable rather than strong and even impersonal all the time. UCF research indicates showing concern for students and their learning leads to higher satisfaction.
Tell story about mother stripping my emotions to create masculine IBM worker to ensure my success.
Increase self-disclose leads to higher degree of trust, social penetration theory
social media reveals things through an any one individual’s lens rather than traditional filtering from media alone.
How do you help your team, instructors, or yourself learn how to express their “true selves” in the internet – that is where we are doing a large amount of our teaching and professional networking. It is a really important skill. Yet, we pay little attention to assist folks in understanding and developing this important skill.
Bargh and his colleagues conducted research on the true self revealing that if you cannot express your true self online, it will be difficult to form close relationships with those that you meet online.
I have reaped great benefits, which I like to call unintended consequences, from self-disclosure on social media (uncertainty reduction theory). I have build meaning professional and personal relationships that have led to presentations, publications, collaborations, support, and meaningful friendships..
---
Research tell us that the internet allows folks to better express our True selfs. This may be hard for folks who have multiple selfs. The true self and the project self and/or the future self.
To not have a multiple selfs. Just one, authentic self.
We have less of a need to keep our private life’s separate from our work life’s. Those who have separate identities on social media are almost seen as shady, hiding something, or just a PR machine. People may want to interact less, may not take what is said seriously…
Let’s look at an example from the travel industry, the airline industry to be exact. Not only am I a social scientist but I have a background in organizational communication – specifically, organizational change, org culture, org analysis based on symbols using Schein’s model of org culture analysis, etc.
When we look at this Delta safety video from a several years ago what do we see?
Formal, perfect – who is this darn perfect, right?
We did have a time in our society (and still do in many populations) that it was about perfection
We care about you
Transparent fees
Let’s just be real and have fun
Now everyone wants to be real, authentic, have fun…however, Delta still always seems like they are not having such great fun
Social presence theory from the 70s discusses that rich media leads to perceptions of another, even when being media, as being a real human being, authentic, potentially having greater feelings of immediacy and feelings of intimacy.
Realness, authenticism
Quotes on social presence
--Develop intimacy and immediacy, how do you develop meaningful connections
--Frequent communication, messaging through social media
--Use rich media like video and audio to unpack the unwritten expectations or emphasize the written
--let students know there is a person behind that course site – however, I am not advocating for video lectures
Quotes on showing concern from UCF
-- Facilitate learning, effective communicating, show concern
Quote research on authentic learning
Cognitive, Behavioral, Affective learning experiences
Focus on learning outcomes such as empathy
facilitate learning, communicate ideas and information, organize his or her course, assess student progress, demonstrate interest in student learning, and show respect and concern for students.
the authors concluded that students used three general “factors” to define the quality of their educational experience: the degree to which the instructor facilitates learning, is able to manage the learning environment, and fosters a supportive learning climate. The CART model suggested further that, in the eyes of students, both excellent and poor teaching is a function of those dimensions
As you can see this provides students an opportunity to communicate creatively and in engaging ways, use video, images or other rich media, and learn how to present themselves online
Support your students public displays of their work, building their digital literacy skills, helping them document what they learned in class and showing it to future employers.
Also, it is a way of capturing of tacit knowledge and your students digital footprint of learning
Student interaction with instructor
Increase communication and contact
Provides opportunity for frequent contact
Be real – authentic
Build social presence
Building cooperation and opportunities for feedback
Student interaction with other students
Open and public connections with those inside and outside the class
Opportunities to easily bring in experts
Text plus images
Richness
Engaging
Consumable
Current
Uses media in which students are familar
Student interaction with content
Rich and current content
More recently, I examine my experiences…sadly, traveling
Southwest
Then, Delta
Then, Southwest loves us – humazing
Then, humanizng the organization
Embrace differences, multiple identities, individuality, and creativity…
Increase in use of social media and self-disclosure has led to an increase in the weight indivdiuals put on being real – being human, and being authentic
Emotions are valued, emotional intelligence is valued over other intelligences
Greater need to develop an identify, express that identify, by building a strong culture and presence as an institution, and developing a voice as a teacher, teacher presence or social presence
This is no longer the days of IBM corporate culture, no emotions, logic drives everything…
Personality – is it evident in each person and how they communicate with each other, staff, students, staff, faculty? Through which mediums? Are you building hurdles to decrease your workload/increase efficiency or focusing on the needs/success of your client? What are the long term effects of these hurdles on diffusing a supportive climate? Practices and tech? Is it evident in the environments and objectics of your organization?
Through blogging, microgblogging, youtube, facebook, Instagram, snapchat, and an array of social media tools, you can build your own authentic self and your university can do the same…
The more you self-disclose and build transparency, the more people will understand you, your values resulting in increased trust…
Make social media a priority - Take time to use social media, understand it – connect with your students, staff, and faculty – don’t fear and avoid it
It is okay to reveal your true self and be vulnerable…
Create a culture that is supportive and collectivistic. What and how we communicate, our messages, our comm behavior – creates culture, sustains culture, and has the potential to transform culture
Nonverbal communication on spaces and artifacts
Invest in supporting your students…helping them using whatever medium is relevant to them, anytime, anywhere, from any device.
Students can tweet Verizon, United, and an array of business and be supported. What are you doing at your institution to meet this anytime, anyplace expectations instilled from commercial support models
Provide training for faculty and staff, all of them, on using social media effectively for communication with students, with each other, and with the community.
Provide incentives to faculty and staff for innovative ways to connect with students
The story of #iamuwm, breaking down silos
The final trend I want to discuss is the push for data and evidence…
Reduce costs, ensure quality
Produce results
Support student success
Great accountability expected
Enrollments are down
Less funding from States
Now data is coming to us at our finger tips in fancy dashboard so we can make better decisions
In the financial industry and…
In the medical industry
Provide students more adaptive and personalized learning based on the data
Assess your students needs
Students want personalized dashboard and personalized support and information on their degree program
Nebraska was just telling me how they built a product where a student gets to see multiple paths to their degree based on their course choice
**Yet, we are spending a lot of time identifying the at-risk student and send them emails that they might not even read all because they maybe didn’t login one day – there might better ways to use student data in an automated sense
Some of us teachers have been using learner analytics for years…of course, I email my students when they miss something. And I know they did because I have active learning, student centered assessments.
Huba and Freed
Conduct studies with your own students
Survey students, staff, and faculty
Do pilot studies – be ready to walk away
Examine national data from PEW and other sources
ECAR and others
How many of you believe this?
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Consideration in that
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Technology,
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Outside of the standard curriculum
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Society in general
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You need a strategy, in the classroom a pedagogical strategy
What social process will it help me facilitate
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Discuss the push towards personalization due to societal trends. There is a focus on student-centered, active learning
Students:
Learning, at our finger tips just in time
Instructor role change, content is already Googleable, what do you bring to the table as an instructor
Instructional support, just in time
Instructional materials, Oer, MOOCs, how to find repurpose
Programs can offer students alternate pathways to degrees and student success. You can have learning when, where, and how you want it. Again, we see themes as the user or the student as being center stage – personalize degree pathways.
UWM is a leader in the mediated delivery of courses and programs in tech-enhanced, blended, and online, including traditional and self-paces (UPACE).
UWM leads the state in flex programming and competency based education.
UWM has received recognition for its efforts in blended faculty development and self-paced (UPACE) instruction.
MOOCS are not a strategy. MOOCs can facilitate a strategy.
The means to do this will be built off of the knowledge of blended and online faculty development and course design, upace model, and flex programming.
All encompassing of the things we talk about
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In thinking about how we might traditionally communicate with out students…
Meet our needs
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Source, Receiver
Sending, Encoding
Past experiences, attitudes
Now you have to start thinking more about what you want to communicate to your students, and what is the best way to communicate that to them, while considering how they are receiving you
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Source, Receiver
Sending, Encoding
Past experiences, attitudes