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

Showing posts with label ADDIE Model. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ADDIE Model. Show all posts

Design Plan for Materials Design

ADDIE Model, Online Instruction, online learning, Online Teaching Practices 0 comments


Design Plan for Materials Design:
Creating an EFL Reading Exercise for A1+ Learners

By Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano
Sunday, May 3, 2015
Twitter: @jonacuso
Post 162

Antecedents



As the quotation explains, summative evaluation is a key step in determining how well one’s course participants are attaining course objectives.

a)   The goal of summative evaluation is then to determine the effectiveness of a project or course.
b)   These evaluations normally are conducted at the end of a project, providing culminating information. But as the ADDIE Model for Instructiona Design suggests, evaluation can take place all around the process.
c)   Combined with regular formative evaluation (ongoing smaller evaluations), the evaluation process can provide valuable information for maintaining and improving online courses or hybrid/blended teaching learning scenarios.

When instructional designers need to conduct an evaluation, they often create Evaluation Plans. An Evaluation Plan examines learning objectives and teaching goals, evaluation methods whether they are summative or formative, and available assessment data either coming from learners as well from teachers’ memoranda. It can indeed be used as a tool not only to plan effective course evaluation procedures that help learners build their knowledge, but also to make sure that the assessments in a course are aligned to learning objectives and pupils are not being graded in areas that were not fully or at all covered during the course.
In this post, it is my intention to complete an Evaluation Plan for one week of the online course I was developing some time ago. In this blog entry, I intend to analyze my learning objectives, evaluation methods, and assessment data for you –the reader- to have a better understanding of what this entails.

Evaluation Plan

As previously explained, my Materials Design students at Universidad Latina are asked to develop all sorts of learning materials, e.g. reading tasks, for their current or even future language learners. As part of their training, learners must demonstrate how a reading activity is created by taking into account how to choose the right text for a specific target group and the steps they consider the most appropriate to use the text as much as possible as an instructional resource to help A1 students develop their language proficiency.

To create the right kind of reading activity, as indicated below [see chart], students must be certain of how the CEFR (Common European Framework of Reference) is used to differentiate language proficiency levels, applied to English in our teaching case. Additionally, learners must understand the different uses of implicit and explicit information in texts to develop different types of reading activities to motivate current or future students to use higher thinking skills in the activities that are created. Finally, because these activities are included as part of a lesson plan, the ABDC Method, along with Bloom’s Taxonomy, is used to guarantee that Materials Design students are creating materials aligned with the content that is covered in class. And in terms of alignment, the use of all these elements will also guarantee that the instructional resources and learning outcomes are linked and congruent.


In terms of challenges, I must admit that the use of the resources (CEFR Descriptors, types of reading activities, usage of Bloom’s Taxonomy, and the ABCD Method) is crucial in materials design. If students do not really understand how all these elements interact among them, learners will miss the whole point in designing and creating a language activity for reading skills.


What I see as a way to mitigate the implications this wrong use or understanding of the resource is providing students with good sample activities that meet all quality requirements. That is, by either providing these samples or –even better- by creating a sort of video illustrating the interactions of these elements can be the best way for students to comprehend the rationale behind tasks creation.



Design Plan for Materials Design from jonacuso


Monday, May 04, 2015



Evaluating One’s Developed Course Material

ADDIE Model, Online Instruction, online learning, Online Teaching Practices 0 comments


Community of Practice Reflection:
Evaluating One’s Developed Course Material

By Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano
Sunday, May 3, 2015
Twitter: @jonacuso
Post 161

Antecedents

After creating plans and prototypes for an online course, it is important to review your work and evaluate the materials that you have created. It is important that you evaluate the course materials that you have developed and highlight areas that can be improved. But this is something that can only be done when the process has undergone planning and production.
Here we have four questions that anyone in instructional design should ask him/herself. Take a look at this short questionnaire and keep the questions in mind when working with your instructional design and development.

The Questionnaire

·        How can you improve the quality of the instructional resources you have developed?

Quality –in terms of the instructional resources one gets to design and develop for an online course- is something that can be improved only with time. To put it simple, anyone developing instructional resources needs to get confident with the use of the ADDIE model to create them and review the process every step of the way.
Evaluation needs to be one of the cornerstones of this never-ending cycle in the search for improvement. After this phase, the real creation of the instructional prototypes and their use in a real course is what will tell us where they need to be refined to make them better.

·        What challenges can instructors anticipate facing during the evaluation of the online course?

As pointed out in several of my blog posts regarding instructional design, evaluation of an online course is crucial, but only through the gaining of experience in the ADDIE model –as a creative design process- is what becomes the initial challenge.
As soon as we get to develop some “clinical eye” after working with the instructional resources with real students, we can determine the areas that need to be improved to make them more profitable for learners. With a lot of common sense, creativity, and some good training on video and audio editing, teachers can do magic.

·        How can it be planned to mitigate these challenges?

As mentioned before, a way to mitigate these challenges is to evaluate the results one gets after the use of instructional resources. As soon as students get to use those resources, there is some sort of summative and formative assessment. Both of them can give us some qualitative data as backwash that when analyzed can give us a good insight of how these resources are working to help students build up their knowledge.
There will not be an immediate change, but it will trigger some good thinking that can help us improve to mitigate any “bad” effect we have discovered along the way.

·        What questions may instructors still have about implementing and evaluating online or blended courses?

More than questions about implementing and evaluating an online course, lots of recommendations come into my mind.
a)   The ADDIE Model is a great tool to work with educational resources and to make sure they align with one’s instruction, but it must be borne in mind that we must think globally. That is, it is not just working with a single week’s learning goal; it is working with the whole package: 15 weeks.
b)   The implementation phase might take longer than you think, and for that reason one does not have to panic or get annoyed. A whole online course takes time to be carefully developed to have it running well.
c)   Train yourself in the use of Web 2.0 tools and software that can be of use in your field of expertise. The know-how of all these gadgets around you can become handy.

Conclusion


          Online, hybrid, or blended teaching is no easy task. Improvement in the creation of instructional resources must be attained via ADDIE rationale. However, it must be kept in mind that it is necessary to go through the process not just in a lineal way, but cyclically where any of the steps can be used: Analysis, Design, Development, Implementation, and evaluation. Challenge anticipation is one other thing that must be considered. Ideas, for them to get materialized, may bump into challenges that were not initially thought of, but if this can be done from the very beginning, the instructor is bound to find ways to overcome problems. And if questions arise during the designing or developmental stages, it is necessary to contact one’s community of practice to nurture oneself from the experience and expertise of others who may have already found ways to overcome the same challenges we can face.


Evaluating One’s Developed Course Material from jonacuso


Sunday, May 03, 2015



Challenge of Implementation

ADDIE Model, Online Instruction, online learning, Online Teaching Practices 0 comments


Challenges of Implementation

By Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano
Saturday, May 2, 2015
Twitter: @jonacuso
Post 160

Antecedents



·         As the quotation explains, good design does not necessarily ensure a successful course; there are other factors that must also be considered to ensure success.
·         As one’s online course transitions to the implementation phase, it is essential to consider which tools and resources need to be in place for students to successfully experience one’s course. If the pieces are not in their place, it is better to wait for a while and straighten up details to ensure a favorable outcome.
·         In this post, I intend to explore how online courses are delivered at my institution. My experience, along with other professor’s experience that can be traced on the web, can help the new instructor to consider potential issues that can arise along course implementation.
·         I also intend to identify resources that will support students’ preparation to take the online course I was developing at the university where I work.
·         I also analyze challenges that any instructor or content designer may face when implementing the online course being developed.

At Universidad Latina in Costa Rica, most of –if not all- courses are taught F2F with some hybrid learning twists that some of us, faculty members, have done to be fully working with digital learners, who need to be learning not only inside the classroom but autonomously outside the classroom as well.

At Ulatina, as we commonly call our university, we are provided with a Moodle platform that has most of the plentiful features that can be used to empower students with their learning. From my personal point of view, I think Moodle is a great tool that not many of the faculty members are exploiting at its full potential. I also think there is some sort of reluctance towards its use by many professors who are slightly behind the use of education technologies. But in my personal case, nn my language courses at Ulatina, I tend to always furnish my virtual space with lots of information, prezis, pdfs, links to webpages, learning tasks, research and paper submission, discussion forums, etc. to help students learn what it is required from them [based on the course objectives and content].

Considering my English School partners, the very first challenge that will be encountered is training these other prospective instructors for a Materials Design course like the one I used to teach before. Based on what was explained above, I do not have to worry about having students take the course since most of them are digital learners, but what about other teachers? Can teaching personnel in any higher education institution be labelled as digital learners? If I were to train a body of language teachers, I would definitely need the assistance of the IT Department to train them on what to do while using our Moodle LMS. Additionally, our faculty members will need to be trained on the philosophy of VLEs (Virtual Learning Environments) to comprehend the scope of action for them (the instructors) and for our students. But if these two issues were taken care of from the very beginning, nothing would guarantee the success of some sort of virtual learning for pupils.


The second big challenge that I visualize is getting real assistance from our Education Technologies Department to really implement a virtual course. Though I am certain that they work hard on this area by trying to take teaching personal into attending training sessions, not all professors show up for training adducing all kinds of excuses. I have talked about this several times with university authorities, and although Laureate endorses this kind of virtual and hybrid education, it looks like at our university the idea is not well-accepted yet by peers. That is probably why most of our courses –if not all- are F2F and our Moodle platform is not fully exploited. But if I got their help, I am sure that we could start some sort of “revolution” in the way we have been providing instruction to our students in Costa Rica and at Ulatina.




Qm standards 2011-2013 from jonacuso




Challenges of Implementation from jonacuso


Saturday, May 02, 2015



Reflection on Content Design

ADDIE Model, Content Design, Online Instruction, Online Teaching Practices 0 comments


Reflection on Content Design

By Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano
Friday, May 1, 2015
Twitter: @jonacuso
Post 159

Antecedents

·         As one progresses through the ADDIE model in designing and developing a course, it is essential to reflect at every stage and evaluate the work one has done so far.
·         Getting accustomed to the ADDIE phases can indeed guide you through the whole process to successfully get fruitful results for you, the instructor, and for your pupils.
·         As a Community of Practice Reflection for those who are interested in the ADDIE Instructional Design Model, I hereby evaluate my Action Plan (Blog Post #157) and my Resource Prototype Development (Blog Post #158).
·         Thinking of the possibilities of ADDIE, you may consider this as a way of piloting online courses in online programs. Even this may actually be used in blended or hybrid learning education.





My Reflection

After working for about a year with the English Language Fellow from the American Embassy over here in Costa Rica in 2011, the creation of video media for instructional purposes was well assimilated and has helped me think insightfully in terms how a resource can be used to improve student understanding and deeper learning. For this reason, I am certain that it is in the process of creating an instructional resource prototype that the real training for us instructors really begins, and the experience we, the trainers, gain is the most important one.

For any neophyte in media production as educational resources for courses or programs, we always have to be in the lookout for improvement and analysis [following the ADDIE model principles]. I would not call myself an expert on media production of educational resources, but it takes time to develop the competencies needed to become independent in terms of production and analytical to envision what is needed to help students learn. Avoid depending on others and try two different things, depending on what your learning style is:

a.   Self-teach yourself as much as you can, so you do not have to depend on others for any instructional design resource production.
b.   Enroll in MOOCs like in Coursera.Org and help yourself learn more about instructional design to start developing our expertise.
c.    Give it a try! This is what the most important experience of all is. Experimenting by yourself will teach you lots of things from trials and errors. And don’t give up!

I cannot talk about questions or concerns we instructors can have when carrying out our action plan to devise the best of the instructional resources for one’s course. The questions, problems, and the finding of solutions will take place –no doubt-. But this is the very moment in which all of us learn from ourselves and others to find the best way out to provide students with the learning they have to accomplish in our courses.


Reflection on Content Design from jonacuso


Friday, May 01, 2015



An Instructional Resource Prototype

ADDIE Model, Instructional Design, Learning, Online Instruction 0 comments


An Instructional Resource Prototype
By Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano
Thursday, April 30, 2015
Twitter: @jonacuso
Post 158

Antecedents

·         Instructional resources can be costly in time and effort to develop. Creating rough drafts or prototypes of instructional resources will help any teacher or instructor evaluate and revise the resources before one commits the time and effort to make a final version that can be used as part of a current or future course.
·         In addition, a prototype allows us to review and revise our own resources, making sure each single resource is supporting the desired learning objectives and goals of the course one gets to be teaching.
·         In this Assignment, from the instructor’s point of view, I want to show how I developed a prototype for one instructional resource from my Action Plan (which is posted right here by as Blog Post #157) and that is reproduced too at the end.
·         I wanted to analyze how that resource supported my learning objectives for the online course I was –at that point- developing. This can give you a rough idea of how the ADDIE model for producing instructional material.
·         Then, I explored how to mitigate implementation challenges that could arise for my instructional resource.

The Actual Plan

In my action plan for my Materials Design course at the university level, it was indeed essential to visually provide learners with some sort of aid for them to build their own reading activities for their current or future EFL/ESL students. As someone who constantly browses the web to try to spot new material and media to be used in my courses, it is often difficult to find what I would simply call tailor-made ones. So, when there is no such a thing still available on the web, it is our instructor’s task to create it to give to our students for the understanding of the subject-matter and for them to accomplish the learning outcome of a unit, week, or module in our course outline and program.



In my action plan, I highlighted an instructional resource I do not think it really exists. It is highlighted in red, and included here as well:

Instructional Resource
Video or slideshow to display how a reading activity is designed

What would a prototype media look like to help students understand how a reading activity for language learners is designed? 


If asked about the challenges in regards to this piece on instructional resource, I must admit that it has to do with the students’ reaction towards it. Its success can only be measured if the learning outcomes are produced, and depending on how well it is achieved, then we can say that is good. If not, we need to start over again with the analysis, based on the ADDIE model, to mitigate the misleading impact it can produce.

Doing something like this is indeed a challenge.



Concluding Remarks

          Basically what we have here is an attempt to help oneself find the suitable steps to create instructional pieces that can facilitate student knowledge acquisition. As soon as learners have gotten the information required, the next step is to find (a) way(s) to help them develop their skills, so they can visualize how this skills can actually become a competence they can exercise at work. By means of this, we have indeed helped students learn something deeply.



An Instructional Design Prototype from jonacuso


Thursday, April 30, 2015



A Bit of Reflection on the ADDIE Design Model

ADDIE Model, Hybrid and Blended Learning, Online Instruction, online learning, Online Teaching Practices, VLE, VLEs 0 comments


A Bit of Reflection on the ADDIE Design Model

By Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano
Thursday, September 4, 2014
Twitter: @jonacuso
Post 140

As one progresses through the ADDIE model in designing one’s course, it is imperative to reflect at every stage and also evaluate the work one has done so far. In this analysis, the instructor must evaluate his/her Design Plan and address any challenges or concerns one gets to spot while developing or implementing the Plan.

Browsing through several SlideShare.Com documents on the ADDIE instructional design model, I came across the following slide presentation that deepens or develops the issue of design a bit more, and that clarifies certain concerns one may have while beginning to work with this methodology.

The analysis phase is crucial in understanding who the audience is. But we cannot let out what the behavioral outcome is going to be. For that reason is very important to analyze the learning constraints and delivery options that are needed to guide students towards the accomplishment of one of the course’s learning outcomes.

What I definitely needed to visualize when initially working with the ADDIE method was the visual and technical design strategy that match the instructional strategies and the behavioral outcomes written in one’s objectives. In this second phase, with this information I could clearly see the scope of what I want students to achieve.

While working on the Develop Phase, I concluded that at times it will be important to develop materials for the students, but the very first thing to do is to review the existing material so I do not have to reinvent the wheel. Once I have these things clear (the materials), it is now the right time to develop instructional courseware to make it viable to start training one’s students.

Prior to the implementation phase, it is a must to create or design a “training session” for the students. But at the same time, I need to think that I must self-train myself to fully understand the course curriculum, learning outcomes, method of delivery and testing procedures to be able to work with all students evenly.

But if all parts are important and crucial in the ADDIE model, the evaluation phase is –in my personal opinion- the most transcendental of all. Here is where the cyclical process starts again in the search for the best teaching practice that fully fits the course and the students.



eLearning Industry (2013, May 8) The ADDIE Instructional Design Model. Retrieved from on February 4, 2013  from:
http://www.slideshare.net/elearningindustry/the-addie-instructional-design-model-20797917


Pronunciation
Development
BIN-02 Pronunciation 1
BIN-06 Pronunciation 2
BIN-04 Reading Skills 1
Reading Skills
Development
BIN-08 Reading Skills 2


Curated Topics
Online
TEFL Daily
ELT Daily
English Language Teaching Journal
Phonemics Daily
The Linguists: Linguistics News
Jonathan’s Learning Attic


A bit of reflection on the addie design model from jonacuso

The Addie instructional design model from eLearning Industry


Thursday, September 04, 2014



How to Improve the Quality and Scope of Needs Assessment

ADDIE Model, Hybrid and Blended Learning, Needs Assessment, VLE, VLEs 0 comments


How to Improve the Quality and Scope of Needs Assessment

By Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano
Friday, August 29, 2014
Twitter: @jonacuso
Post 137

As one progresses through the ADDIE model in designing course instructional goals and tools, it is important to pause at every stage and evaluate the work that one has done so far. In this Community of Practice reflection and blog post, one can evaluate one’s way of going about Needs Assessment, and one is able to highlight areas that can be improved.


When asked how it is that one can improve the quality and scope of one’s Needs Assessment, it is necessary to think of the ADDIE method. This methodology can be improved in every step by having quite clear in one’s mind the learning goals that need to be achieved per week and in each project or course. Once skills, knowledge, and attitudes are considered, it is a good start to ask one’s faculty partners and students if they really find those factors relevant to accomplish the learning goal for a particular week. Furthermore, as soon as learning objectives are phrased, they ought to be perfected by having clear in mind what the “condition” [according to the ABCD method of writing objectives] is, since that is the behavior instructor’s want learners to replicate accurately.

Accuracy can also be attained by having in mind the need for the right instructional content behind the accomplishment of learning goals. As pointed out before, it is also convenient to ask other faculty members [professors or administrative staff] what they consider part of the instructional content that students need to learn to be able to achieve the course learning goals. Because, once this content is clearly identified, the teacher can define the instructional strategies and the needed resources to cover it. Then the transition from content to the execution of the learning objective for a specific week, fully connected with the course student exit profile, can be accomplished successfully with the right assessment.

What additional data sources are useful and/or informative when working in one’s needs assessment? Not only the faculty members who have already taught the course but also former students who can provide feedback are good sources of additional data to make decisions on how instructional content can be delivered. Student feedback is indeed crucial to fully develop the course that better suits the students and not the instructors in terms of learning. With some sort of students’ course evaluation polls or surveys, data can be gathered and analyzed to create a robust design that can really focus on the final product with some great learning for the learner.

What really counts for the instructor is what one can learn from the whole implementation process and its subsequent evaluation to see where refinement needs to be stressed. The ADDIE methodology of online course design is the one source of other data that is needed to replicate the process as many times as needed to perfect one’s course. That is the analysis, the design, the development, the implementation, and the evaluation are a never-ending cycle that can produce great quality in online teaching.



Culatta, Richard. (2013). ADDIE Model. Retrieved from the Instructional Design webpage at http://www.instructionaldesign.org/models/addie.html

Legault, N. (n.d.). [Infographic] The ADDIE Model. Retrieved from the Learn Dash Webpage at http://www.learndash.com/addie-model-explained-infographic/



Pronunciation
Development
BIN-02 Pronunciation 1
BIN-06 Pronunciation 2
BIN-04 Reading Skills 1
Reading Skills
Development
BIN-08 Reading Skills 2
Curated Topics Online
TEFL Daily
ELT Daily
English Language Teaching Journal
Phonemics Daily
The Linguists: Linguistics News
Jonathan’s Learning Attic


How to improve the quality and scope of needs assessment from jonacuso



Friday, August 29, 2014



Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Comments (Atom)

    Reflective Online Teaching

    Reflective Online Teaching
    Since 2010

    Visitors

    Costa Rica

    Costa Rica
    My Home Country

    525 Pots and counting

    525 Pots and counting

    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

    Blog Archive

    • ▼  2026 (25)
      • ▼  February (13)
        • Finding One’s Voice in the Classroom: Themistocles...
        • The Gossiping Witness: Narrative Voice and Reliabi...
        • The Nature of Learner Error in ELT: Distinguishing...
        • If the Gods of the Past Were Not Gods: Interdiscip...
        • Designing Group Contracts and Managing Group Work ...
        • Witnessing Genius and Loss: Marcellus, Archimedes,...
        • Understanding Group Dynamics and Learner Groupings...
        • Everyday Ethics and the Pedagogy of Kindness in Wi...
        • Understanding Group Dynamics and Learner Groupings...
        • Art at the Threshold of the 21st Century: Creativi...
        • Differentiation in Action: Owning Learner Success ...
        • Why Lycurgus Is Rarely Taught in Ethics Education:...
        • Differentiation by Task and Support in ELT: Reflec...
      • ►  January (12)
    • ►  2025 (81)
      • ►  December (10)
      • ►  November (12)
      • ►  October (11)
      • ►  September (10)
      • ►  August (8)
      • ►  July (7)
      • ►  June (6)
      • ►  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)
      • ►  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)

    Labels

    • #EdChat (8)
    • #LTTO (14)
    • A Princess of Mars (1)
    • A Tale of Two Cities (1)
    • A Woman fo No Importance (1)
    • A1 Learners (1)
    • ABLA (9)
    • Academic Integrity (1)
    • Academic Research (9)
    • Adaptive Learning (1)
    • ADDIE Model (7)
    • Adult ELT (1)
    • Adventure Fiction (1)
    • Affective Filter (1)
    • Afro-Caribbean Lore (1)
    • Agile Professional Development (1)
    • AI Detection (1)
    • AI Ethics (1)
    • AI in ELT (1)
    • Alberto Delgado Alvarez (1)
    • Aldous Huxley (1)
    • Aldus Huxley (1)
    • Alexander Luria (5)
    • Algorithmic Bias (2)
    • Anansi (1)
    • Ancient Astronaut Theory (1)
    • Ancient Mysteries (1)
    • Andragogy (5)
    • Andy Curtis (1)
    • Angelology (2)
    • Animal Consciousness (1)
    • Animal-Machine (1)
    • Aouda (1)
    • Apps for Education (1)
    • Archaeology (1)
    • Archetypes (1)
    • Archimedes (1)
    • Arsène Lupin (1)
    • Art and Technology (1)
    • Artificial Intelligence (2)
    • Artistic Philosophy in ELT (1)
    • Assessment (12)
    • Assessment in Action (2)
    • Assessment Literacy (1)
    • Assessment Practices (6)
    • ASSURE (1)
    • Asynchronous Tools (2)
    • Attention Span (1)
    • Augustine (1)
    • Aural/oral skills (1)
    • Authenticity (1)
    • autonomous learning (1)
    • Autonomy (1)
    • Barthesian Analysis (6)
    • Behavior (1)
    • Being vs. Having (1)
    • Benjamin Button (1)
    • Bergson (1)
    • Betrayal (1)
    • Bettelheim (1)
    • Biblical Monotheism (1)
    • Biblical Text Analysis (1)
    • Big Data (6)
    • Bilingualism (1)
    • Biopolitics (1)
    • Blended Learning (1)
    • BlendIt Course (8)
    • Blind Faith (1)
    • Bloom's Taxonomy (5)
    • BNCs (9)
    • Book Critique (2)
    • Book of Enoch (1)
    • Book of Job (1)
    • Book of Revelation (1)
    • Bookmarking Sites (1)
    • Brave New World (1)
    • Brazilian Literature (2)
    • Brazilian Romanticism (1)
    • Breakout Rooms (1)
    • British Council (9)
    • Bureaucracy (3)
    • Burnout Prevention (1)
    • Cain (1)
    • Carl Jung (2)
    • Case Study (4)
    • Catalog of Rubrics (1)
    • Catholic Storytelling (1)
    • CEF (2)
    • CEFR (1)
    • CEFR-Aligned Assessment (1)
    • Centro Universitario de Desarrollo Intelectual (1)
    • Character Analysis (3)
    • Character Development (1)
    • Charles Dickens (1)
    • Christian Demonology (1)
    • Civil Obedience (1)
    • Classical Biography (1)
    • Classroom Management (7)
    • Classroom Practice (1)
    • Cloud Reader (1)
    • CLT (3)
    • Coaching (1)
    • Coaching in Teacher Classroom Observation (2)
    • Code of Ethics (1)
    • Cognitive Load (1)
    • Collectivism (1)
    • Colombian Poetry (1)
    • Color Motifs (1)
    • Communicating about Uncertainty (1)
    • Communicative Competence (1)
    • Communicative Language Teaching (5)
    • Communities of Practice (2)
    • Community of Practice (8)
    • Comparative Mythology (1)
    • Comparative Religion (2)
    • Competency-Based Learning (9)
    • Conformity (1)
    • Conformity Pressure (1)
    • Connectivism (1)
    • Constructive Alignment (1)
    • Constructivism (1)
    • Contemporary Aesthetics (1)
    • Contemporary Short Fiction (1)
    • Content Assimilation (1)
    • Content Design (1)
    • Cooperative Learning (2)
    • CoP (3)
    • Costa Rica (2)
    • Costa Rican Literature (1)
    • Course Project (2)
    • Creativity (1)
    • critical skills (1)
    • Critical Thinking Skills (2)
    • Cultural Allegory (1)
    • Cultural Assimilation (1)
    • Cultural Centers (1)
    • Culture (11)
    • Culture Framework (2)
    • Culture Teaching (8)
    • Curriculum Design (3)
    • Curriculum Development (6)
    • Custom eLearning (2)
    • Custom Training (1)
    • Dante Alighieri (2)
    • Dante Studies (2)
    • Data Science (7)
    • Data-Driven Teaching (5)
    • Data-Informed Leadership (1)
    • David Fincher (1)
    • DDT (1)
    • Death (1)
    • Deborah Tannen (1)
    • Deductive Grammar Instruction (2)
    • Deep Ecology (1)
    • Dehumanization (1)
    • Demonology (2)
    • Demonology and Devil-Lore (2)
    • Demythologization (1)
    • Deontology (1)
    • Desire (1)
    • Developmental Feedback (1)
    • Diane Larsen-Freeman (1)
    • Didactics (4)
    • Differentiation (3)
    • Digital Culture (1)
    • Digital Inequality (1)
    • Digital Pedagogy (1)
    • Dignity (1)
    • Dino Buzzati (1)
    • Discourse Analysis in ELT (1)
    • Distance Education (2)
    • Dualism (1)
    • Dystopia (2)
    • Dystopian Fiction (1)
    • Dystopian Society (1)
    • E-Portfolios (1)
    • Eco-Criticism (1)
    • Edgar Rice Burroughs (2)
    • Education and Learning (34)
    • Education Policy (2)
    • Education Technologies (9)
    • Educational Evolution (1)
    • Educational Leadership (1)
    • Educational Philosophies (1)
    • EFL/ESL Activities (1)
    • El Clis de Sol (1)
    • eLearning (1)
    • Electracy (1)
    • ELF (1)
    • ELL (17)
    • Elohim (3)
    • ELT (52)
    • ELT Conference (1)
    • ELT Institutions (1)
    • ELT Leadership (1)
    • ELT Professional Development (3)
    • ELT. Teacher Growth (1)
    • Emotional Intelligence (1)
    • Emotional Literacy (2)
    • Empathy (1)
    • English Grammar (3)
    • English Language Teaching (9)
    • English Teaching (1)
    • Enkidu (1)
    • Environmental Destruction (1)
    • Environmental Philosophy (1)
    • Envy (1)
    • Eric Mazur (1)
    • Erich Fromm (4)
    • Error Correction (1)
    • Escape from Freedom (1)
    • Eschatology (1)
    • Esotericism (1)
    • ESP (2)
    • Ethical Judgments (1)
    • Ethical Leadership (1)
    • Ethical Sacrifice (1)
    • Ethics (44)
    • Ethics Analysis (2)
    • Ethics Education (1)
    • Ethics of Care (1)
    • Etiological Storytelling (1)
    • Evaluating Digital Tools (1)
    • Evaluation (4)
    • Evil (1)
    • Executives' School (9)
    • Existentialism (1)
    • Ezekiel (1)
    • F. Scott Fitzgerald (1)
    • Fairy Tales (2)
    • Faivre (1)
    • False Positives (1)
    • Fatalism (1)
    • Fear (1)
    • Feedback (5)
    • Flipped Classroom (1)
    • Flipped Learning (1)
    • Formative Assessment (4)
    • Forums (1)
    • Fossilization (1)
    • Frames-Based Teaching (1)
    • Framing in Discourse (1)
    • Frankenstein (1)
    • Franz Kafka (1)
    • French Literature (1)
    • Freudian Analysis (3)
    • From theory to practice (2)
    • Frommian Analysis (2)
    • Future for Education? (2)
    • Gabriel Escorcia Gravini (1)
    • Gamification (1)
    • George Orwell (1)
    • Global Competence (1)
    • Global Ethics (7)
    • Gnosticism (1)
    • Gothic Literature (1)
    • Grading Ranges (1)
    • Grammar (3)
    • Group Dynamics (2)
    • Group Work (2)
    • Guest Author (1)
    • Guided Practice (2)
    • H. G. Wells (1)
    • H.P. Lovecraft (3)
    • Haiku (2)
    • Hanegraaff (1)
    • HD Brown (1)
    • Hebrew Mythology (1)
    • Hermeticism (2)
    • Higher Education (49)
    • Higher Education Ethics (1)
    • Historical–Biographical Criticism (1)
    • History (2)
    • Homerton College Cambridge Course (2)
    • Hootcourse (1)
    • Horacio Quiroga (1)
    • Human Dignity (1)
    • Human Rights (1)
    • Human-Centered Narrative (1)
    • Human-Centered Pedagogy (1)
    • Hybrid and Blended Learning (61)
    • Hybrid In-person Teaching (1)
    • Hybrid Learning Models (1)
    • Ideology (2)
    • Idioms (1)
    • Iktomi (1)
    • Imagery (1)
    • Inclusive Education (1)
    • Inclusive Pedagogy (2)
    • Independent Practice (1)
    • Individuation (1)
    • Inductive Grammar Instruction (2)
    • Inferno XXXIII (1)
    • infographic (1)
    • Institutional Culture (1)
    • Institutional Improvement (1)
    • Institutional Memory (1)
    • Instruction-Giving (1)
    • Instructional Design (3)
    • Integration of Technology into Teaching (10)
    • Interdisciplinary Inquiry (1)
    • Interlanguage (1)
    • Interventions in ELL (1)
    • Irony (2)
    • Isaac Asimov (1)
    • Issus (1)
    • Italian Literature (1)
    • Jacqueline Alves Souza (1)
    • Jacques de Molay (1)
    • Jacques Lacan (4)
    • James Knowles (1)
    • James Thurber (1)
    • Japanese Folklore (1)
    • Jehovah (1)
    • Jeremiah (1)
    • Jewish Apocalypticism (1)
    • Jewish Mysticism (1)
    • John Carter (1)
    • José de Alencar (1)
    • JotForm (1)
    • Journey to the Center of the Earth (1)
    • Jules Verne (3)
    • Jungian Analysis (7)
    • Just-in-Time Training (1)
    • Kabbalah (1)
    • Kahlil Gibran (2)
    • Kathleen M. Bailey (1)
    • Kindness (1)
    • King Arthur and his knights (1)
    • Kirkpatrick Model (15)
    • Knight Templars (1)
    • Kurt Vonnegut (1)
    • La gran miseria humana (1)
    • La Insolación (1)
    • Lacan (1)
    • Lacanian Analysis (7)
    • Language (1)
    • Language Competences (1)
    • Language Education (2)
    • Language Institutions (1)
    • Language Learning (14)
    • Language Series Comparative Analysis (1)
    • Language Teaching (8)
    • Latin American Literature (3)
    • 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 (2)
    • Learner Diversity (3)
    • Learner Engagement (1)
    • Learner Grouping (2)
    • Learner-Centered Pedagogy (1)
    • Learner-Centeredness (1)
    • Learning (8)
    • Learning Activities (1)
    • Learning Analytics (1)
    • Learning Objectives (2)
    • Learning Preferences (1)
    • Learning Styles (1)
    • Learning Technologies (1)
    • Leopoldo Lugones (1)
    • Les Demoiselles d’Avignon. Pablo Picasso (1)
    • Lesson Design (2)
    • Lesson Planning (6)
    • Lev Vygotsky (4)
    • Libraries (1)
    • Life is a Dream (1)
    • Life Stories (1)
    • Linguistics (2)
    • Listening (1)
    • Literary Analysis (6)
    • Literary Criticism (24)
    • Literary Ethics (1)
    • Literature (35)
    • LMS (6)
    • Lord’s Prayer (1)
    • LOTI Profile (5)
    • Love (2)
    • Lycurgus (1)
    • Machado de Assis (1)
    • Machiavellian Narration (1)
    • Mãe (1)
    • Magón (1)
    • MakerSpace (1)
    • Manuel González Zeledón (1)
    • Marcel Duchamp (6)
    • Marcellus (1)
    • Marxist Literary Approach (1)
    • Mary Shelly (1)
    • Materials Design (1)
    • Maurice Leblanc (1)
    • Meaning of Justice (1)
    • Melodrama (1)
    • Mentalism (1)
    • Mentorship (1)
    • MEP (Ministerio de Educación Pública) (1)
    • Metacognition (3)
    • Metadata (1)
    • Metaphysics. Self-Mastery (1)
    • Methodology (3)
    • Micro-Ethics (1)
    • microcelebrities (1)
    • Microlearning (1)
    • Mind Maps (2)
    • Mindfulness (12)
    • Misogyny (1)
    • Mistake vs. Error (1)
    • Mixed-Ability Classes (1)
    • Mixed-Methods Research (4)
    • Mobile Learning (1)
    • Modeling in ELT (1)
    • Modern Realism (1)
    • Modular Learning (1)
    • Moncure Daniel Conway (5)
    • MOOCs (1)
    • Moodle (5)
    • Moral Allegory (1)
    • Moral Biography (1)
    • Moral Cannibalism (1)
    • Moral Education (1)
    • Moral Lesson (1)
    • Moral Responsibility (1)
    • Moral Theology (2)
    • Moral-Humanistic Criticism (1)
    • Morality (1)
    • Motherhood (1)
    • Motivation (3)
    • Music and Learning (1)
    • Myth Interpretation (1)
    • Myth of Evil (1)
    • Mythological Archetypes (1)
    • Mythology (1)
    • Narrative Empathy (1)
    • Narrative Structure (2)
    • Narrative Voice (1)
    • Nature Spirits (1)
    • Necropolitics (1)
    • Needs Assessment (3)
    • Netiquette (1)
    • Network Community (1)
    • NGL (1)
    • Nicaraguan Literature (2)
    • Nicatesol (1)
    • Nietzsche (1)
    • Nive Events of Instruction (1)
    • Nonviolent Communication (6)
    • ñor Cornelio Cacheda (1)
    • Nouns in English (1)
    • Novice Teachers (3)
    • Nudos (1)
    • Objective Writing (1)
    • OER (1)
    • Off-the-Shelf Learning (1)
    • Online Community (1)
    • Online Instruction (55)
    • online learning (46)
    • Online Learning Programs (1)
    • Online Persona (9)
    • Online Program Design (1)
    • online teaching (4)
    • Online Teaching Approach (1)
    • Online Teaching Practices (72)
    • Oral Assessment (1)
    • Oral Communication (1)
    • Oral Skills (2)
    • Organizational Learning (1)
    • Orientalism (1)
    • Oscar Wilde (1)
    • Padre Luis Coloma (1)
    • Paper.li (1)
    • Passepartout (1)
    • Pater Noster (1)
    • Paul of Tarsus (1)
    • Paz a los muertos! (1)
    • PBL (1)
    • PD (2)
    • Peace to the Dead! (1)
    • Pedagogy (2)
    • Pedro Calderón de la Barca (1)
    • Peer Instruction (1)
    • Penitence (1)
    • Penny Ur (2)
    • Personal Learning Networks (2)
    • Phileas Fogg (1)
    • Philosophy (1)
    • Phonemics (4)
    • Phonetics (4)
    • Phonotactics (3)
    • Pilot Programs (1)
    • PLEs and PLNs for Lifelong Learning Competencies Week 1 (1)
    • Plot Analysis (1)
    • Plutarch (4)
    • Poetry (2)
    • Poetry Analysis (1)
    • Political Discourse (1)
    • Political Heroism (1)
    • Popol Vuh (1)
    • Population Control (1)
    • Postcolonialism (1)
    • Posthumanism (1)
    • Pride (1)
    • Procrustean Syndrome (1)
    • Produsage (1)
    • Produser (1)
    • Professional Capital (2)
    • Professional Competencies (1)
    • Professional Development (10)
    • Professional Growth (1)
    • Professional Identity (1)
    • Projec-Based Learning (1)
    • Promethean Myth (1)
    • Pronunciation (7)
    • Psychoanalysis (2)
    • Psychological Analysis (1)
    • Psychological Resilience (1)
    • Psychology (1)
    • Public Speaking (1)
    • Purgatorio XI (1)
    • Qualitative Research (4)
    • Quantitative Research (4)
    • Rapport (1)
    • rationality (1)
    • Reading (1)
    • Reading and Vocabulary (2)
    • Recruitment (1)
    • Recycling in Education (1)
    • Reflective Communities (1)
    • Reflective Evaluation (2)
    • Reflective Journaling (5)
    • Reflective Practice (13)
    • Reflective Reading (1)
    • Reflective Teacher Communities (1)
    • Reflective Teacher Leadership (1)
    • Reflective Teaching (59)
    • Religious Authority (1)
    • Religious Evolution (1)
    • Research (9)
    • Resilience (1)
    • Return on Investment (1)
    • Richard Schmidt (2)
    • Risk Communication (1)
    • Robert Frost (1)
    • Robert Gagné (2)
    • ROI (1)
    • ROI in ELT (1)
    • Roland Barthes (3)
    • Roman Conquest (1)
    • RTC (1)
    • Ruben Puentedura (1)
    • Rubric-Based Planning (1)
    • Rubrics (3)
    • Samael (1)
    • SAMR Model (1)
    • Scaffolding (2)
    • Schema (1)
    • Scholasticism (1)
    • Science Fiction (1)
    • Science Fiction Studies (1)
    • Scoop.it! (1)
    • Second Language Acquisition (5)
    • Secret Societies of the Middle Ages (1)
    • Semiotics (2)
    • Sentence Patterns (1)
    • Shadow (1)
    • Short Films (1)
    • Short Stories (4)
    • Short Story Analysis (1)
    • Sioux Legends (3)
    • Sir Gareth (1)
    • Sir Gawain (1)
    • Sir Lancelot (1)
    • Sir Tristam (1)
    • Skepticism (1)
    • Sketchpads (1)
    • Skill Gap Analysis (1)
    • SLA (4)
    • Slavery in Brazil (1)
    • Social Agency (1)
    • Social Criticism (1)
    • Social Media (29)
    • Social Networking in Education (3)
    • Social Transformation (1)
    • Son of Man (1)
    • Sparta (1)
    • Speaking (1)
    • Speaking Scenarios (1)
    • Stephen Krashen (1)
    • Sticky Curriculum (1)
    • Storytelling (1)
    • Strategies for online teaching (2)
    • Student Agency (1)
    • Student Assessment (1)
    • Student Engagement (1)
    • Student Interest (3)
    • Student Motivation (2)
    • Student Tips (2)
    • Sumerian (1)
    • Summative Assessment (2)
    • Supervision (1)
    • Sustainability (1)
    • Symbolic Philosophy (1)
    • Symbolism (3)
    • Synchronous Online Teaching (1)
    • Syntax (2)
    • Syracuse (1)
    • Task-Based Instruction (1)
    • Task-Based Language Teaching (1)
    • Task-Based Learning (1)
    • TBI (1)
    • TBLT (2)
    • Teacher Agency (2)
    • Teacher Development (23)
    • Teacher Education (1)
    • Teacher Evaluation (2)
    • Teacher Feedback (2)
    • Teacher Identity (2)
    • Teacher Inquiry (1)
    • Teacher Mentoring (2)
    • Teacher Mentorship (1)
    • Teacher Observation (1)
    • Teacher Professional Development (2)
    • Teacher Reflection (2)
    • Teacher Training (5)
    • Teacher Well-being (4)
    • Teacher Well-Being. Kirkpatrick Model (1)
    • Teacher–Student Relationships (1)
    • Teaching (47)
    • Teaching Adolescents (1)
    • Teaching ePortfolio (1)
    • Teaching Grammar (2)
    • Teaching Models (1)
    • 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)
    • Technocriticism (1)
    • Technological Assessment (2)
    • Technology Use Tips (1)
    • Templars (1)
    • Temporality (1)
    • Testing (1)
    • The Art of Loving (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 Gods of Mars (1)
    • The Kybalion (2)
    • The Loincloth (1)
    • The New Normal (1)
    • The Noticing Hypothesis (2)
    • The Outsider (1)
    • The Prophet (2)
    • The Real (1)
    • The Road Not Take (1)
    • The Time Machine (1)
    • Theater Criticism (1)
    • Themistocles (1)
    • Theophoric Names (1)
    • Theseus (1)
    • Thomas Keightley (2)
    • Thomistic Ethics (1)
    • Thomistic Grace (1)
    • Tolkien (1)
    • Trickster (1)
    • Trinity (1)
    • Turnitin (1)
    • UCC (1)
    • Ugarit (1)
    • Ugolino (1)
    • Universidad Mariano Gálvez (2)
    • Unreliable Narrator (1)
    • Utilitarianism (1)
    • Vengeance (1)
    • Videoconferencing Platforms (1)
    • Virtual Classroom Features (1)
    • Virtual Classrooms (1)
    • Virtual Learning Environments (8)
    • Virtual Teaching (5)
    • Virtualized Teaching (1)
    • Virtue (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)
    • Western Esotericism (1)
    • Western Mysticism (1)
    • Wilbert Salgado (12)
    • William Elliot Griffis (1)
    • Working Adult Student (5)
    • Workplace Dynamics (1)
    • writing (2)
    • Writing Skills (1)
    • Yahweh (1)
    • Yzur (1)
    • Zecharia Sitchin (1)
    • ZPD (1)

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