This document provides guidance for designing blended courses that thoughtfully integrate online and face-to-face learning. It discusses promoting student understanding through building knowledge online and asynchronously, strengthening understanding through elaboration and sharing perspectives synchronously, and applying understanding through discussion, problem-solving and assessment. Managing blended learning environments effectively requires addressing challenges like engaging both online and on-site students and maintaining multiple technologies simultaneously. The goal is meeting student and institutional needs through flexible instruction that develops students' cognitive abilities.
Advances in computer technology continue to change the
lives of instructors and students. One of the exciting new ways
to use computers in education is in testing. According to Brown
(1997), computer-based tests (CBTs) have been used in second
language testing since the early 80's. This rapid change in mode
of administration of tests is very understandable. As Jamieson
(2005) states, computers have a number of very desirable
functions that considerably eases up the test creation and
assessment task, including item creation and presentation,
answer collection and scoring, statistical analysis, and storage,
transmission, and retrieval of information. Also the literature on
computer-assisted language learning indicates that language
learners have generally positive attitudes towards using
computers in the classroom (Reid, 1986; Neu and Scarcella,
1991; Phinney, 1991).
Computer-based assessment has been used in many
disciplines to give both formative feedback and to offer
summative testing. This is especially so in the sciences. There is
evidence to suggest that formative computer-based assessment
can produce improvement in student learning outcomes
(Clariana, 1993) and that this can lead to a positive attitudes of
students to learning.
Advances in computer technology continue to change the
lives of instructors and students. One of the exciting new ways
to use computers in education is in testing. According to Brown
(1997), computer-based tests (CBTs) have been used in second
language testing since the early 80's. This rapid change in mode
of administration of tests is very understandable. As Jamieson
(2005) states, computers have a number of very desirable
functions that considerably eases up the test creation and
assessment task, including item creation and presentation,
answer collection and scoring, statistical analysis, and storage,
transmission, and retrieval of information. Also the literature on
computer-assisted language learning indicates that language
learners have generally positive attitudes towards using
computers in the classroom (Reid, 1986; Neu and Scarcella,
1991; Phinney, 1991).
Computer-based assessment has been used in many
disciplines to give both formative feedback and to offer
summative testing. This is especially so in the sciences. There is
evidence to suggest that formative computer-based assessment
can produce improvement in student learning outcomes
(Clariana, 1993) and that this can lead to a positive attitudes of
students to learning.
we need new techniques foe teaching and learning. our life is changing its own way so methods of learning should be changed accordingly. here author has focused on blending of class room learning and on line learning; its called blended learning. its very useful for innovative teacher and students.
Classroom management refers to the actions and strategies that teachers use to maintain order in a
classroom. A Virtual classroom is an asynchronous-based online learning environment that delivers course
materials to learners and provides collaboration and interaction using an asynchronous-based forum as
the main platform to support the learners’ independent study. In a physical classroom there is physical
contact between the students and the instructor. This makes it easy for the instructor to enforce rules that
are intended for effective classroom management. This physical contact is elusive in a virtual classroom
and yet effective classroom management is desired. Virtual classroom is useful to the students for revision
exercise; as a backup for physical classroom contact. This paper proposes a conceptual model using
existing virtual tool to bring about an effective classroom management strategies in a Virtual classroom.
Blended Learning Features within the Blackboard VLEMatthew Deeprose
We were asked to give a presentation outlining tools that may help the delivery of a new blended learning programme. These are the slides that went with our presenation.
ProctorU Labs: State Authorization in Distance EducationProctorU
ProctorU is proud to offer a free training webinar this month about the impact of the Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 (HEOA). The focus of the session will be the the intriguing legal landscape of state authorization for online education programs. Should an online program be registered, licensed or authorized in each state that it offers courses? The answer can vary from state to state and the jury is currently out on the federal guidelines. This webinar will feature a presentation by Patty Milner, program manager at Colorado State University-Pueblo.
we need new techniques foe teaching and learning. our life is changing its own way so methods of learning should be changed accordingly. here author has focused on blending of class room learning and on line learning; its called blended learning. its very useful for innovative teacher and students.
Classroom management refers to the actions and strategies that teachers use to maintain order in a
classroom. A Virtual classroom is an asynchronous-based online learning environment that delivers course
materials to learners and provides collaboration and interaction using an asynchronous-based forum as
the main platform to support the learners’ independent study. In a physical classroom there is physical
contact between the students and the instructor. This makes it easy for the instructor to enforce rules that
are intended for effective classroom management. This physical contact is elusive in a virtual classroom
and yet effective classroom management is desired. Virtual classroom is useful to the students for revision
exercise; as a backup for physical classroom contact. This paper proposes a conceptual model using
existing virtual tool to bring about an effective classroom management strategies in a Virtual classroom.
Blended Learning Features within the Blackboard VLEMatthew Deeprose
We were asked to give a presentation outlining tools that may help the delivery of a new blended learning programme. These are the slides that went with our presenation.
ProctorU Labs: State Authorization in Distance EducationProctorU
ProctorU is proud to offer a free training webinar this month about the impact of the Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 (HEOA). The focus of the session will be the the intriguing legal landscape of state authorization for online education programs. Should an online program be registered, licensed or authorized in each state that it offers courses? The answer can vary from state to state and the jury is currently out on the federal guidelines. This webinar will feature a presentation by Patty Milner, program manager at Colorado State University-Pueblo.
Blended learning strategies vary according to the discipline, the year level, student characteristics and learning outcomes, and have a student-centred approach to the learning design. Blended learning can increase access and flexibility for learners, increase level of active learning, and achieve better student experiences and outcomes.
This article will attempt to convince the reader that a blended learning approach, where an online course is supplemented by one or more classroom sessions along with several other potential delivery methods, has the greatest potential for a strong learning outcome and student satisfaction. The artic|e's contents are largely based on this author’s experience teaching a hybrid class at California State University, the research he did for his doctoral dissertation, along with an article he wrote for the Wilberforce University Faculty Journal.
Enhancing Learning with Technology in Higher Educationjjulius
Originally developed in this form for Dr. Jana Pershing's SDSU class on Teaching Sociology, March 2008, though elements of the presentation were previously shared in other contexts.
3. Blended learning
Combination of:
On-site and online
Synchronous and asynchronous
“Best of both worlds” (Dziuban, Hartman and Moskal 2004)
“Thoughtful integration” (Garrison and Kanuka 2004)
4. Good learning environments
Motivation Cooperation
Real-world problems Multiple perspectives
Application / integration Critical debate
of new knowledge
Open dialogue
Avoid information overload
Others?
Reflection
5. Blended Gone Bad
No student engagement
Surface-level engagement
In-class activities replicate online activities
Focus on credentials rather than learning
Other effects?
6. Promoting Understanding
Online / Online / On site /
Asynchronous Asynchronous Synchronous
Build Strengthen Use
Understanding
7. 1. Building Understanding
Basic facts, concepts, principles, axioms, theories…
Reflection, practice, feedback, remediation, assessment
Chunking and cognitive load
“Learning objects”:
audio, video, text, manipulables/simulations, self assessments
Arthur C. Clarke: “Any teacher that can be replaced by a machine
should be.”
8. U.S. Department of Education meta-analysis
“Overall … promoting self-reflection, self-regulation and self-monitoring
leads to more positive online learning outcomes. Features such
as prompts for reflection, self-explanation and self-monitoring
strategies have shown promise for improving online learning
outcomes.”
9. Metacognition
“…positive effects for techniques such as prompts that
encourage students to assess their level of understanding or set
goals for what they will learn whereas mechanisms such as guiding
questions or advance organizers had mostly null results. … In a related
vein, there is some evidence that online learning environments
with the capacity to individualize instruction to a learner’s
specific needs improves effectiveness.”
-- U.S. Department of Education. Evaluation of Evidence-Based Practices in Online
Learning: A Meta-Analysis and Review of Online Learning Studies. September 2010.
10. 2. Strengthening Understanding
Elaboration / making connections
Finding and sharing
alternative explanations
examples and non-examples
Move toward complexity / transfer
Benefit of multiple sources
11. Problems Everywhere…
“The ability to solve very complex and ill-structured problems requires that
students learn to think differently than they normally do in classrooms and
training sessions, where they focus on memorization and comprehension.
Students are unable to solve ill-structured problems because they cannot think
flexibly enough. Throughout their education, they are taught only one point of
view: that of their teachers. If students comprehend that point of view well
enough to pass the quiz or exam, they are rewarded with a good grade.”
- Jonassen, D.H. (2004) Learning to Solve Problems. An Instructional Design Guide. San Francisco: Pfeiffer.
12. 3. Putting Understanding to Use
Discussion and perspective sharing
Creation of new works
Ill-structured problem solving
Cognitive flexibility
Authentic experience and assessment
Teachers vs. machines (Arthur C. Clark revisited)
14. Mixed/Hybrid/Blended
Learning
Mixed/Hybrid/Blended learning can mean many
things. For example:
An online class which meets at least once in a
traditional classroom setting
An on-ground course which submits all work
electronically and engages in classroom discussions
through an LMS
A traditional on-ground class mixed with distance
students attending live through
videoconferencing, webconferencing or video
streaming
A combination of on-ground, online, web and
videoconferencing in the same live class setting
What other examples do you have?
17. Challenges
Challenges exist in managing both the classroom AND
the technology at the same time
Live in-class as well as live distance students by video
Live web-conferencing, sharing PPT, desktop and
applications
Live chat monitoring and responding
Holding in-class activities that engage both the on-ground
and distance students equally
Engaging with the distance students equally with the
traditional students
Group work
18. What do you do…
If the students are required to give presentations, both
local and distance?
If one or more of the technologies fails?
Audio
Video
Webconferencing
Desktop/application sharing
Multimedia such as YouTube or other videos
19. Attention to Students
Mixed classroom with synchronous videoconferencing
Raised hands can be seen, students engaged, but teachers
must discipline themselves to watch the screens too
Webconferencing with limited video feeds makes this more
difficult
Webconferencing systems enable:
Desktop, application and multimedia sharing
Live chat features
Live whiteboard capabilities
20. Other Methods
Additional options:
Have more than one instructor assigned to the class so that
one can lecture and the other can run the
technology/monitor the webconferencing classroom
Employ a TA or assign a student for each class session to
manage the technology allowing the teacher to focus on
teaching
Employ a technician to ensure the classroom is set up and
running before each session, and is available for immediate
response in the case of a system failure
21. Group Work
How do you do group work in a mixed classroom?
Generally, distance students work in a group while local
students are broken in to groups as well
Technology limitations for mixing distance and local
students in workgroups during a live class.
Using webconferencing systems, breakout rooms can be set
up for distance and local students to chat and engage in
group activities.
Distance and local students benefit from mixed
engagement
22. What is the Goal?
Ultimately, the need/demand for mixed classroom
environments varies:
Institutional and student needs
Availability of funds and technology support (or lack thereof…)
Making the distance classroom simulate the traditional
classroom:
“…there is some evidence that online learning environments with the
capacity to individualize instruction to a learner’s specific needs improves
effectiveness.”
-- U.S. Department of Education. Evaluation of Evidence-Based
Practices in Online Learning: A Meta-Analysis and Review of Online
Learning Studies. September 2010.
How do student learning needs factor in?
What about the students’ comfort levels with technology?