skip to main | skip to sidebar
Reflective Online Teaching
My Personal Site for Reflective Teaching
RSS
    Jonathan Acuña Solano, Post Author
    Contact Email: jonacuso@gmail.com

Teacher Performance in Online Learning Scenarios

Online Instruction, online learning, Online Teaching Practices, Virtual Learning Environments, VLEs 0 comments

Taken from http://www.paneuropeannetworks.com/science-technology/eit-digital-announces-best-digital-technology-scale-ups/


Teacher Performance in
Online Learning Scenarios

By Prof. Jonathan Acuña-Solano, M. Ed.
School of English
Faculty of Social Sciences
Universidad Latina de Costa Rica
Sunday, April 30, 2017
Post 312

          As an active online instructor with a compressed experienced gained in two years and a half of course delivery in VLEs (Virtual Learning Environments), I am often asked by faculty members and other teaching professionals if online courses are good room for teacher training and professional development. Basing myself on my gained expertise I must go beyond my professional experience as a current instructor and as a former online student; I must then refer to Pawan, Wiechart, Warren, & Park (2016) who have stated that “evidence suggests that online courses can be effective in improving teacher knowledge, instructional practices, and student achievement.” In other words, online courses can help teaching professionals improve and grow professionally.

This is not just my gut feeling about online learning and of what I am currently doing in virtual learning scenarios as an instructor, but this is now based on what Pawan, Wiechart, Warren, & Park (2016) have detected in their research and professional practice in online English language teacher education. The fact is that my etnographies of courses I have delivered, when compared to the experts’ way of thinking, do point out towards teacher knowledge, instructional practices, and student achievement as the room for teacher training and professional development. But how can the training in these areas improve teacher performance in online learning scenarios? What needs not be be overlooked by professionals?

          A look into Teacher Knowledge
          VLEs and online learning are not equivalent to technology usage as it is commonly mistaken by some teaching professionals; they are much more aligned with pedagogy for distant education. As I get to explain colleagues and other educators, online learning is not about using platforms such as Moodle, Blackboard, Canvas, Schoology, and so on; it is much more connected to pedagogy or andragogy, depending on the target group of students one has in mind. The online instructor needs to be trained on the real understanding and development of pedagogy (andragogy) since they are much more relevant to student learning processes. As pointed out by Pawan, Wiechart, Warren, & Park (2016), “pedagogy rather than technology should drive online instruction,” not the other way around. Online teaching ought to be focused on pedagogy when student teachers and regular students are trained online.

          Teacher Knowledge that is developed in VLEs is not measured by how much an instructor knows about Web 2.0 or the use of CMSs (content management systems); it is measured by how much s/he understands the pedagogical processes behind deep learning and the development of skills and competences needed by professionals in their daily work. Teacher Knowledge is linked to how an instructor is able to profit from the tools s/he is provided to help students develop themselves within the course content (and beyond). All this is about how educators make use of social, teaching, and cogntive presences in a course to replicate what can be done in a F2F classroom but with the aid of technology driven by pedagogical comprehension of learning processes.

          Instructional Practices in VLEs
          As it can be understood by any neophite instructor teaching an online course for the first time, instruction in an online environment is not the same as in a F2F setting. As stated by Laureate Education Inc. (2012), though there are similar features in both teaching/learning environments, an instructors must be present and available for his/her learners though there may be preset times to interact synchronously or asynchronously for both teachers and students. As in a F2F teaching environment, an instructional practice that needs to be present is the setting of clear expectations for learners. And because students can interact with the course content any moment, “it is important to establish how much time you expect them to be working on coursework each week” (Laureate Education Inc., 2012). This is another area where teachers through online training can profit to help learners focus on their learning.

          Laureate Education Inc. (2012) also insists on the importance pedagogical features of online learning. For Laureate it is crucial to “create a learning community” with the students (social presence), “vary learning experiences” students are exposed to to foster skills and competencies development (teaching presence), provide learners with “timely feedback” as part of instructor’s guidance for them (teaching presence), “invite discussions for inquiries and reflections” needed for the interaction of students with coursework and content (cognitive presence), and “use content resources that are easily accessible by all students” (teaching and cognitive presence). Going beyond these practices for online teaching, Laureate Education Inc. (2012) also suggests that all instructors “customize learning to individual needs and interests” to provide them with educational tasks that can fulfill their learning expectations in one’s course, and they also insist on the importance of the “use of Real-World examples in learning activities” and the “use of proper netiquette and cyber-activity.” To sum up, “… presences are essential for learning by means of the online medium, and instruction through the medium should strive toward their attainment” (Pawan, Wiechart, Warren, & Park, 2016).

Teacher Performance in Online Learning Scenarios by Jonathan Acuña on Scribd


Student Achievement in Online Learning
          Oftentimes I have had this discussion with colleagues and teaching professionals, Are learners in a VLE over, average, or under achievers? Though my very personal experience triggers an answer to this question, the fact is that no overgeneralization can be made for all online instructors. Based on what I have been able to document in my courses in which I only count with faculty members of various university across the globe, students become “over achievers” with the right doses of motivation. Laureate Education (2012) differentiates two types of motivation when dealing with an instructor-led or self-paced course; for them any learner “must be self-motivated, however an instructor and other peers typically help motivate” them (instructor-led course) and “must have a strong self-motivating personality to be successful” in a self-paced course. Teachers in online courses can for sure profit from them if they possess the right motivation and desire to grow professionally triggering a lot of knowledge in their current and future students.

          If a student enters an online course with the right encouragement (self-motivation), s/he is ready to partake in a VLE course. Anyone with the right doses of motivation can become an over achiever (or an average one); anyone who can be positively motivated and who has been given the right amount of formative feedback can also become an over achiever (or continue being an average one). Though there is no way of knowing if a student will become someone who likes to perform beyond the expected and average, another element to consider is the summative assessment criteria used in an online course. Based on my instructor’s experience where constructivist tasks are mostly problem-based learning-oriented linked to real-world learning scenarios, students get engaged and usually go the extra mile in spite of the fact that you also find learners who simply do the minimum to get the right score to comply with a task. My experience with training faculty members from various universities has also given me certainty that teaching professionals can be interested learners.

          Are online courses good room for teacher training and professional development? Sure! Teachers can gain lots of teacher knowledge, comprehend instructional practice trends quite common in virtual learning scenarios, and help foster student achievement by means of the right motivation exponentially, all as part of teacher training and professional development. Online teaching is not about technology or how it is used; “online teaching is enhanced by technology but not subsumed by it” (Pawan, Wiechart, Warren, & Park, 2016). Teaching professionals can also be part of this online experience to grow professionally beyond the mortar-and-brick walls of a classroom. Their teacher knowledge can be expanded to understand how pedagogy works in VLEs; the discovery of new instructional practices connected to a community of learning online can be of great use for current and future courses; and ways to help student achievement can also be learned to help all kinds of students.


References
Laureate Education. (2012). Instructor-Led vs. Self-Paced Courses. Retrieved from Laureate Faculty Development: global.laureate.net/

Laureate Education Inc. (2012). Top 10 Practices for Teaching Online. Retrieved from Laureate Faculty Development: global.laureate.net/

Pawan, F., Wiechart, K., Warren, A., & Park, J. (2016). Pedagogy & Practice for Online English Language Teacher Education. Alexandria VA: Tesol Press.


Sunday, April 30, 2017



Problems with Usability and Accessibility

Teaching Practices, WAS, Working Adult Student 0 comments

Problems with Usability and Accessibility

By Prof. Jonathan Acuña-Solano, M. Ed.
School of English
Faculty of Social Sciences
Universidad Latina de Costa Rica
Thursday, April 27, 2017
Post 311

          What needs to be done when a Working Adult Student (WAS) or any other traditional student in higher education is having trouble with the course content and the cognitive, learning-driven balance it needs to show for them? If usability in course content and balance is meant to imply easiness in use of the content for a course and if accessibility is the possibility of material being accessed by all learners, having trouble with any of these two college education constructs will alter the logical balance for a WAS and how s/he is to cognitively interact with it for learning purposes; consequently, this “ill” situation must be corrected to aid them in their learning process.

          How could this “ill” situation affecting WASs (and any other student) be solved satisfactorily to foster deep learning through usability and accessibility? First of all, course material that is provided for learners in a course needs to be adhered to the principle of usability. Material must be representative of what is being addressed in a F2F classroom or while the students is interacting with the course content on a virtual environment; it needs to have epistemological meaning and specificity within the discipline in which it is used and where skills and competences are meant to be developed. Moreover, material, which does not favor learning, does not use the principle of transferability and durability. For instance, if a mindmap is rather confusing than helping learners recall information to be used for application, analysis, synthesis or evaluation, then this map violates the principles of transferability and durability, and it will not help a student learn or even just recall information that can be used –initially- in the classroom and –later on- in their future jobs. If readings are long and questionnaires meant to help learners comprehend them are vague, then we encounter problems with specificity and representativity and lacks real epistemological meaning for what the learner is studying and its applicability to his/her future or current job.

          Secondly, material that is provided for students in a course has to be linked to the principle of accessibility. As a faculty member at a private university in my home country, I have seen learners trying to find books, material, mindmaps, software, and the like for their course homework, term papers, projects, and so on, material that was supposed to be available for them from day one onward since it was included in the course outline. Through my many years in college settings, I have been appointed to teach courses in which the material is not available for learners in the campus library, or at least in the copying center when this material has been designed and developed by other professors. As a proactive faculty member, what I have done many times is to either have the material ready for students to get it at the university photocopying center (which I rarely do), or what I try to do is to have the material ready to be downloaded from the university’s Moodle platform. In this way, I have provided accessibility of the material to every single member of a course directly from their Moodle accounts, just one click away, and tried enhance usability from day one onward.

          To sum up, if there are problems with usability and accessibility, they must be fixed at once, and not just for WASs but for any other traditional student taking the same course with adult learners. To be sure that these college pillars are met, here you have a simple checklist to use or to have learners provide you with some feedback:




Thursday, April 27, 2017



Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

    Reflective Online Teaching

    Reflective Online Teaching
    Let's learn together

    Visitors

    Costa Rica

    Costa Rica
    My Home Country

    TESOL Certified Instructor

    TESOL Certified Instructor

    Certified Virtual Instructor

    Certified Virtual Instructor

    PD Talks & NCTE-Costa Rica

    PD Talks & NCTE-Costa Rica

    Copyscape

    Protected by Copyscape

    Labels

    • #EdChat (8)
    • #LTTO (14)
    • A1 Learners (1)
    • ABLA (9)
    • Academic Research (9)
    • ADDIE Model (7)
    • Afro-Caribbean Lore (1)
    • Alexander Luria (5)
    • Anansi (1)
    • Andragogy (5)
    • Andy Curtis (1)
    • Apps for Education (1)
    • Assessment (9)
    • Assessment Practices (3)
    • ASSURE (1)
    • Asynchronous Tools (2)
    • Aural/oral skills (1)
    • autonomous learning (1)
    • Barthesian Analysis (5)
    • Behavior (1)
    • Bettelheim (1)
    • Biblical Text Analysis (1)
    • Big Data (6)
    • Blended Learning (1)
    • BlendIt Course (8)
    • Bloom's Taxonomy (5)
    • BNCs (9)
    • Book Critique (2)
    • Book of Job (1)
    • Bookmarking Sites (1)
    • Case Study (4)
    • CEF (2)
    • Classroom Management (2)
    • Cloud Reader (1)
    • Coaching in Teacher Classroom Observation (2)
    • Code of Ethics (1)
    • Communicating about Uncertainty (1)
    • Community of Practice (8)
    • Competency-Based Learning (9)
    • Content Assimilation (1)
    • Content Design (1)
    • CoP (2)
    • Course Project (2)
    • critical skills (1)
    • Critical Thinking Skills (2)
    • Culture (11)
    • Culture Framework (2)
    • Culture Teaching (8)
    • Curriculum Design (2)
    • Curriculum Development (5)
    • Data Science (7)
    • Data-Driven Teaching (5)
    • DDT (1)
    • Deductive Grammar Instruction (2)
    • Deontology (1)
    • Developmental Feedback (1)
    • Diane Larsen-Freeman (1)
    • Didactics (4)
    • Distance Education (2)
    • E-Portfolios (1)
    • Education and Learning (34)
    • Education Technologies (9)
    • Educational Philosophies (1)
    • EFL/ESL Activities (1)
    • Electracy (1)
    • ELF (1)
    • ELL (16)
    • ELL. ELT (1)
    • ELT (35)
    • ELT Conference (1)
    • English Grammar (3)
    • English Teaching (1)
    • Enkidu (1)
    • Eric Mazur (1)
    • ESP (2)
    • Ethical Judgments (1)
    • Ethics (37)
    • Ethics Analysis (1)
    • Etiological Storytelling (1)
    • Evaluation (1)
    • Executives' School (9)
    • Ezekiel (1)
    • Fairy Tales (2)
    • Feedback (5)
    • Flipped Classroom (1)
    • Flipped Learning (1)
    • Formative Assessment (1)
    • Forums (1)
    • Frankenstein (1)
    • Freudian Analysis (3)
    • From theory to practice (2)
    • Future for Education? (2)
    • Global Competence (1)
    • Global Ethics (7)
    • Grading Ranges (1)
    • Grammar (3)
    • Guest Author (1)
    • Guided Practice (2)
    • H. G. Wells (1)
    • H.P. Lovecraft (3)
    • Haiku (1)
    • HD Brown (1)
    • Higher Education (49)
    • History (2)
    • Homerton College Cambridge Course (2)
    • Hootcourse (1)
    • Human Rights (1)
    • Hybrid and Blended Learning (61)
    • Hybrid In-person Teaching (1)
    • Idioms (1)
    • Iktomi (1)
    • Independent Practice (1)
    • Inductive Grammar Instruction (2)
    • infographic (1)
    • Instructional Design (3)
    • Integration of Technology into Teaching (10)
    • Interventions in ELL (1)
    • Isaac Asimov (1)
    • Jacque Lacan (1)
    • Jacques de Molay (1)
    • James Thurber (1)
    • Japanese Folklore (1)
    • Jeremiah (1)
    • JotForm (1)
    • Jungian Analysis (4)
    • Kahlil Gibran (2)
    • Kathleen M. Bailey (1)
    • Kirkpatrick Model (1)
    • Knight Templars (1)
    • Lacanian Analysis (4)
    • Language Competences (1)
    • Language Learning (13)
    • Language Teaching (6)
    • Laureate Course Module 3 Teaching with Technology (19)
    • Laureate Educator (4)
    • Laureate Educator in the XXI Century (2)
    • Laureate Educator-Week 1 (1)
    • Laureate Educator-Week 2 (1)
    • Laureate Educator-Week 3 (1)
    • Leadership (9)
    • learner autonomy (1)
    • Learning (8)
    • Learning Activities (1)
    • Learning Objectives (2)
    • Learning Preferences (1)
    • Learning Styles (1)
    • Les Demoiselles d’Avignon. Pablo Picasso (1)
    • Lesson Planning (4)
    • Lev Vygotsky (4)
    • Libraries (1)
    • Life is a Dream (1)
    • Life Stories (1)
    • Linguistics (2)
    • Listening (1)
    • Literary Criticism (15)
    • Literature (29)
    • LMS (6)
    • LOTI Profile (5)
    • MakerSpace (1)
    • Marcel Duchamp (4)
    • Mary Shelly (1)
    • Materials Design (1)
    • Meaning of Justice (1)
    • Metacognition (2)
    • Metadata (1)
    • Methodology (2)
    • microcelebrities (1)
    • Mind Maps (2)
    • Mindfulness (12)
    • Mixed-Methods Research (4)
    • Modeling in ELT (1)
    • MOOCs (1)
    • Moodle (5)
    • Moral Lesson (1)
    • Motivation (2)
    • Music and Learning (1)
    • Mythology (1)
    • Needs Assessment (3)
    • Netiquette (1)
    • Network Community (1)
    • Nicatesol (1)
    • Nive Events of Instruction (1)
    • Nonviolent Communication (6)
    • Nouns in English (1)
    • Objective Writing (1)
    • OER (1)
    • Online Community (1)
    • Online Instruction (55)
    • online learning (44)
    • Online Learning Programs (1)
    • Online Persona (9)
    • Online Program Design (1)
    • online teaching (4)
    • Online Teaching Approach (1)
    • Online Teaching Practices (71)
    • Oral Assessment (1)
    • Oral Communication (1)
    • Oral Skills (2)
    • Paper.li (1)
    • PBL (1)
    • Pedagogy (2)
    • Pedro Calderón de la Barca (1)
    • Peer Instruction (1)
    • Penny Ur (2)
    • Personal Learning Networks (2)
    • Philosophy (1)
    • Phonemics (4)
    • Phonetics (4)
    • Phonotactics (3)
    • Pilot Programs (1)
    • PLEs and PLNs for Lifelong Learning Competencies Week 1 (1)
    • Poetry (1)
    • Popol Vuh (1)
    • Produsage (1)
    • Produser (1)
    • Professional Competencies (1)
    • Professional Growth (1)
    • Projec-Based Learning (1)
    • Pronunciation (7)
    • Psychology (1)
    • Public Speaking (1)
    • Qualitative Research (4)
    • Quantitative Research (4)
    • Reading (1)
    • Reading and Vocabulary (2)
    • Recruitment (1)
    • Recycling in Education (1)
    • Reflective Journaling (4)
    • Reflective Teaching (55)
    • Research (9)
    • Richard Schmidt (2)
    • Risk Communication (1)
    • Robert Gagné (2)
    • Roland Barthes (2)
    • Rubrics (3)
    • Schema (1)
    • Scoop.it! (1)
    • Second Language Acquisition (4)
    • Secret Societies of the Middle Ages (1)
    • Semiotics (1)
    • Sentence Patterns (1)
    • Short Films (1)
    • Short Stories (4)
    • Sioux Legends (3)
    • Sketchpads (1)
    • SLA (3)
    • Social Media (29)
    • Social Networking in Education (3)
    • Speaking (1)
    • Speaking Scenarios (1)
    • Stephen Krashen (1)
    • Sticky Curriculum (1)
    • Storytelling (1)
    • Strategies for online teaching (1)
    • Student Assessment (1)
    • Student Engagement (1)
    • Student Interest (3)
    • Student Motivation (1)
    • Student Tips (2)
    • Sumerian (1)
    • Summative Assessment (1)
    • Syntax (2)
    • Task-Based Instruction (1)
    • Task-Based Language Teaching (1)
    • TBI (1)
    • TBLT (1)
    • Teacher Development (23)
    • Teacher Feedback (2)
    • Teacher Mentoring (2)
    • Teacher Observation (1)
    • Teacher Training (2)
    • Teaching (47)
    • Teaching Adolescents (1)
    • Teaching ePortfolio (1)
    • Teaching Grammar (2)
    • Teaching Online (9)
    • Teaching Philosophy (4)
    • Teaching Portfolio (1)
    • Teaching Practices (49)
    • Teaching Practicum (22)
    • Teaching Presence (2)
    • Teaching Styles (8)
    • Teaching Tips (9)
    • Teaching With Technology (4)
    • Teaching With Technology-Week 1 (1)
    • Teaching With Technology-Week 2 (1)
    • Teaching With Technology-Week 3 (2)
    • Teaching With Technology-Week 4 (4)
    • Teaching With Technology-Week 5 (3)
    • Teaching With Technology-Week 6 (2)
    • Teaching With Technology-Week 7 (3)
    • Teaching With Technology-Week 8 (2)
    • Teaching With Technology-Week 9 (1)
    • Tech Tip (5)
    • Technological Assessment (2)
    • Technology Use Tips (1)
    • Templars (1)
    • The Assassins (1)
    • The Book of Proverbs (1)
    • The Butterfly Circus (1)
    • The Cats of Ulthar (1)
    • The Data Scientist (5)
    • The Epic of Gilgamish (1)
    • The Loincloth (1)
    • The New Normal (1)
    • The Noticing Hypothesis (2)
    • The Outsider (1)
    • The Prophet (2)
    • The Time Machine (1)
    • Thomas Keightley (2)
    • Tolkien (1)
    • Trickster (1)
    • UCC (1)
    • Universidad Mariano Gálvez (2)
    • Utilitarianism (1)
    • Videoconferencing Platforms (1)
    • Virtual Classroom Features (1)
    • Virtual Learning Environments (8)
    • Virtual Teaching (5)
    • Virtualized Teaching (1)
    • Visual Literacy (1)
    • VLE (47)
    • VLEs (38)
    • Vocabulary learning (10)
    • WAS (14)
    • Web 2.0 (4)
    • Web search engine options (1)
    • Web Tools (6)
    • WebQuests (1)
    • Wilbert Salgado (4)
    • William Elliot Griffis (1)
    • Working Adult Student (5)
    • writing (2)
    • Writing Skills (1)
    • Zecharia Sitchin (1)
    • ZPD (1)

    Blog Archive

    • ►  2025 (19)
      • ►  June (2)
      • ►  May (3)
      • ►  April (4)
      • ►  March (6)
      • ►  February (2)
      • ►  January (2)
    • ►  2024 (28)
      • ►  December (3)
      • ►  November (2)
      • ►  October (4)
      • ►  September (4)
      • ►  August (5)
      • ►  July (3)
      • ►  June (2)
      • ►  May (2)
      • ►  April (3)
    • ►  2023 (6)
      • ►  September (1)
      • ►  August (5)
    • ►  2022 (1)
      • ►  July (1)
    • ►  2020 (54)
      • ►  November (4)
      • ►  October (7)
      • ►  September (11)
      • ►  August (15)
      • ►  July (10)
      • ►  April (2)
      • ►  March (5)
    • ►  2019 (13)
      • ►  August (5)
      • ►  July (8)
    • ►  2018 (11)
      • ►  June (2)
      • ►  May (7)
      • ►  April (2)
    • ▼  2017 (6)
      • ►  May (2)
      • ▼  April (2)
        • Teacher Performance in Online Learning Scenarios
        • Problems with Usability and Accessibility
      • ►  January (2)
    • ►  2016 (101)
      • ►  November (4)
      • ►  October (7)
      • ►  September (10)
      • ►  August (4)
      • ►  May (22)
      • ►  April (17)
      • ►  March (21)
      • ►  February (14)
      • ►  January (2)
    • ►  2015 (53)
      • ►  November (5)
      • ►  October (13)
      • ►  August (4)
      • ►  July (8)
      • ►  June (5)
      • ►  May (14)
      • ►  April (4)
    • ►  2014 (40)
      • ►  October (5)
      • ►  September (11)
      • ►  August (4)
      • ►  June (3)
      • ►  May (8)
      • ►  April (5)
      • ►  February (1)
      • ►  January (3)
    • ►  2013 (46)
      • ►  December (1)
      • ►  November (1)
      • ►  October (3)
      • ►  September (5)
      • ►  August (6)
      • ►  July (7)
      • ►  June (6)
      • ►  May (7)
      • ►  April (1)
      • ►  March (4)
      • ►  February (3)
      • ►  January (2)
    • ►  2012 (17)
      • ►  December (3)
      • ►  November (4)
      • ►  October (4)
      • ►  September (6)
    • ►  2011 (5)
      • ►  September (2)
      • ►  August (2)
      • ►  January (1)
    • ►  2010 (46)
      • ►  December (9)
      • ►  November (14)
      • ►  October (3)
      • ►  March (4)
      • ►  February (8)
      • ►  January (8)

Copyright © All Rights Reserved. Reflective Online Teaching | Converted into Blogger Templates by Theme Craft