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Unit
Six: A Template Approach - A Worksheet for Course Development
Unit Overview
This unit provides a guide
to for the subject matter expert to follow for developing online
courses.
Unit Objectives
At the end of this unit, one will be able to:
· Adapt a traditional course for online delivery;
· Select materials suitable for online learning;
· Approach learning and knowledge/skill acquisition in a new way
for E-learning, which allows one to focus on outcomes and interaction;
· Develop a procedure by which technical assistants can help streamline
the production of courses;
· Understand the value of uniformity in structure and delivery;
· Explain how and why technology should be made transparent so
that the learning occurs unimpeded.
Step-By-Step Instructions
a) Divide your course into
five units + final project.
For each
unit, please complete the
following:
i) What is your Unit Topic?
ii) What are your Unit Objectives?
iii) How would you like your students to become enthusiastic
about the topic?
iv) List Learning Outcome
for this Unit
v) Why is this topic relevant, meaningful, and exciting in today's
world? Why does it relate to the world at large?
vi) "Mastery Items and Learning
Outcomes" -- a
bullet list of 10 items or concepts that the student should understand
and be able to manage upon completion of this unit.
vii) Online Lecture: 2 - 5 page discussion by subject matter
expert on the unit topic; a specialized discussion, which includes
material not found in the books or online readings;
viii) Graphics (at least two for each unit) to be included on
the website; graphics should be relevant, either directly as subject
matter material, or which contributes to the general tone of the
website (can be done by the Instructional Technologist);
ix) Links to websites that could be useful, or contain required
reading, and a two-sentence summary for each link (can be done
by Instructional Technologist, with review by subject matter expert);
x) Review or Guiding questions (at least 5) for personal
journal or unit review;
xi) Required Readings list;
xii) Practice or sample tests, review questions, "skill and drill"
materials, if appropriate;
xiii) Unit testing and assessment procedures.
b) Subject matter expert (the person who contributes the material
to develop the course) should have a "All About Me" page which
includes the following
i) Photograph in jpeg or gif format;
ii) One-paragraph executive summary of academic and professional
interests;
iii) List of degrees, courses taught, abbreviated list of articles
and books published;
iv) Brief 10-second mpeg (or streaming media) of him or her saying
"hello" (optional);
v) Brief audio clip (30 second maximum) of greetings, clickable
under photo.
c) Resource Page
i) Links to useful online resources;
ii) Clickable graphics to links that provide useful information;
iii) Bibliography of texts which could be useful in this course
(can be checked out from the library, etc.)
iv) Sample of "successful" or "A" level student work;
v) Ethical guidelines (plagiarism, respect for diversity, e-mail
guidelines, privacy issues, etc.)
d) Final Project
i) Subject Matter Expert statement about how this final project
brings together all that has been learned so far in the course;
ii) Subject Matter Expert statement about how the student should
use the final project as a mental exercise to connect the subject
matter and course content to aspects of the student's life, including
career, academics, personal.
iii) List of potential topics for the final project;
iv) Link to style guide showing the ideal format for the Works
Cited section, either MLA, Chicago, AP, or other;
v) Examples of abstracts;
vi) Sample of student's preliminary prospectus, but where the
student can talk about his or her ideas;
vii) Tips for getting started
- free-write techniques
- outline methods
- focused research methods
- strategies for expanding the "vision statement"
e) Help Desk
i) e-mail to contact person;
ii) links to home page of college;
iii) links to library resources.
f) Discussion Board
i) participation required (frequency, length of postings)
ii) live (synchronous) chat available but not required, due to
time differences and access issues
g) Required Work - a sample (can be different, depending on the
learning objectives)
i) Journal (1,000) for each unit; or, Tutorial Problems to solve;
ii) Research - either annotated bibliography on online sources,
or library resources;
iii) Discussion Board participation
iv) Sample Test (optional)
v) Actual Test (with procedures described clearly)
h) Evaluations (online)
i) Student
ii) Faculty
Think About It! Questions for Consideration, Review, or
Journals
& How does the
"template approach" help you think of learning outcomes and effective
approaches rather than focusing strictly on materials?
& When do you think it is most critical to focus on
the learner rather than course content? Which questions
are most helpful in the template? Which are least helpful?
Can you design your own template, based on the needs of your university
& unique group of students?
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