Instructional Design & Development Studio
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Syllabus | syllabus for our course. You can download a copy in pdf or other formats, or print using the file menu, if you want. |
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Course Videos Playlist | on youtube |
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Week 1: Getting Setup & Job Interview | Week 1 Instructions | Week 1 instructions |
Week 1 Video 1: Welcome to Class | welcome video, going over syllabus |
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Week 1 Video 2: Job Interview Questionnaire | how to do the job interview questionnaire in moodle |
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pdf copy of the job interview | copy you can save if you want for future job interviews |
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How People Learn: 3 Key Findings | The How People Learn book can be read online for free, just google "how people learn" or follow the links from this highlighted section about the 3 key findings from research on learning and instruction. |
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How People Learn book | full text of book online |
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Instructional Design Models | Note the 'modern' and 'postmodern' distinction. Most people don't use those terms, but we'll be focusing more on what Martin Ryder puts in the 'postmodern' category, such as problem-based learning. |
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EduTech Wiki | A great resources with pages on instructional design theories, models, and technologies. |
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Places to find edtech / instructional design jobs | A meta-listing of job boards |
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Week 2: Beginning Moodle Projects | Week 2 Instructions |
instructions for week 2 |
Week 2 Video 1: Getting started with your moodle project | Info on setting up your own moodle space, and thinking about a topic for your moodle project. |
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Week 2 Video 2: Reviewing the job interview | going back over answers to some of the job interview questions See also the pdf copy of the job interview |
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Request your own moodle space | Link to form for requesting your own personal moodle space. |
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Post to your moodle blog | This is the link (also in the top left sidebar) for creating a blog entry on this moodle site. You'll be using your blog a lot to plan and keep track of your moodle project. |
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Getting started with moodle for teachers | Some things may be slightly different since we are using the brand new version 2.0 of moodle. |
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Moodle Teacher Documentation | official docs for teachers |
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Teaching and Learning with Moodle Course | A moodle course about moodle May require free registration |
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List of common misconceptions | List from wikipedia |
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Misconceptions in science | Science education is where there is a huge amount of research into misconceptions. Email me if there is some science or related topic that interests you, and I can help find examples of misconceptions if you like. |
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FACETS database | Another list of scientific misconceptions or phenomenological primitives |
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Potential misconceptions about learning and technology | misconceptions about online learning and so forth |
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Misconceptions about design | misconceptions about design, generally |
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How Much Do College Students Learn, and Study? | article about a recently publicized study & book about student learning in colleges |
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50 Examples of the Need to Improve College Teaching | some examples of the problem of poor teaching & learning practices in colleges |
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Utah Education Network sued over LMS contract award | Desire2Learn (LMS vendor) sues the Utah Education Network (UEN) over its awarding of its new LMS contract to Utah-based Instructure. see the original story in the SLC newspaper: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/home/51072915-76/utah-contract-instructure-uen.html.csp
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How Students Develop Online Learning Skills | how to make the most of online learning |
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Week 3: Constructivist Instructional Design | Week 3 Instructions |
see below |
Objectivist vs Constructivist Design | Read at least the table at the beginning. You'll have to rotate it in your pdf viewer. |
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Applying ISD to Constructivist Learning Environments | You need to scroll up to the top of the article. For some reason it automatically scrolls down halfway when you link there. |
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Designing constructivist learning environments | by Jonassen You'll need to rotate the pages in your pdf reader (try right clicking or using toolbar), or else print it out. |
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The impact of constructivism on ID fundamentals | by Brent Wilson and others This pdf also needs to be rotated. |
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Skiing as a Model of Instruction | Old but neat little paper making an analogy between skiing and designing constructivist learning environments. Thought being in Utah, some of us might find it interesting :) |
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Minds of Our Own (video) | highly recommended video See the opening examples, like making a bulb light, or where do trees get their mass from. And notice the students have to be guided to discover things for themselves (constructivism) in order to really believe them. See also the older video: A Private Universe. There's a link to it in the sidebar of the page. |
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Constructivism and technology use | If you are off campus you'll need to use the vpn (virtual private network) software to access the full text of journal articles: http://library.usu.edu/elecres/off_campus.php abstract: This study used two surveys, the Activities of Instruction 2.0 (AOI 2.0) and the School Technology Needs Assessment (STNA) to assess the relationship between teachers' level of constructivism and their level of technology use. Results indicate that constructivist practices and beliefs were significant predictors of technology use, after accounting for the contribution of other individual level demographic variables, and school-level environmental factors. Teachers with more constructivist instructional practices were more likely to report using technology; similarly, teachers who believed more strongly that IT was a useful tool for student-centered/constructivist teaching were more likely to use technology. |
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Constructing versus playing an educational game | If you are off campus, use USU's vpn software to access this reading: http://library.usu.edu/elecres/off_campus.php abstract: In this study the effects of two different interactive learning tasks, in which simple games were included were described with respect to student motivation and deep strategy use. The research involved 235 students from four elementary schools in The Netherlands. One group of students (N=128) constructed their own memory ‘drag and drop’ game, whereas the other group (N=107) played an existing ‘drag and drop’ memory game. Analyses of covariance demonstrated a significant difference between the two conditions both on intrinsic motivation and deep strategy use. The large effect sizes for both motivation and deep strategy use were in favour of the construction condition. The results suggest that constructing a game might be a better way to enhance student motivation and deep learning than playing an existing game. Despite the promising results, the low level of complexity of the games used is a study limitation. |
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Confessions of a converted lecturer (video) | Eric Mazur, author of the book Peer Instruction http://mazur-www.harvard.edu/research/detailspage.php?rowid=8 |
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Moodle philosophy | social constructionist/constructivist |
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A time for telling | summary of a paper by Schwartz & Bransford |
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Scaffolding problem-based & inquiry learning | response to criticism of problem-based learning, which we'll learn more about next week |
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Week 4: Feedback on Your Moodle Project Topics | Week 4 Instructions | week 4 instructions |
Moodle Project Guidelines |
guidelines for your moodle project |
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Week 5: Problem-Based Learning | Week 5 Instructions | week 5 instructions |
Converting a Topic into a Problem | how to take a typical 'topic' and make it more constructivist - like a problem-based learning activity, or scenario, or game, etc. |
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Summary of Problem-Based Learning | a summary of pbl |
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Problem-Based Learning Clearinghouse | A long list of resources for learning more about problem-based learning |
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Sample PBL Problems | examples of pbl |
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The Jasper Woodbury Series | Real-world math challenges created by Vanderbilt, led by John Bransford, who led the writing of the How People Learn book, too. |
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First Principles of Instruction |
By David Merrill, former professor here at USU (and still an adjunct instructor). Notice the main thing is that students (or trainees) work on a problem "that may be encountered in a real-world situation". |
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A User's Guide to the Legacy Cycle | The Legacy Cycle is a problem-based instructional design model you can use to organize your moodle module if you wish. Contact me for more info or examples. |
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Books on a Table | a scenario for helping students understand Newton's third law |
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Rescue at Boone's Meadow | Part of Vanderbilt's Jasper Woodbury series from the 1990s. |
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Why do we need glasses? Legacy Cycle | Uses the Legacy Cycle framework See A User's Guide to the Legacy Cycle for more info on that. |
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Police Training Scenario | See chapter 1, page 4 p. 34, 47, 67, 93, 113 have other problem-based learning examples |
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Week 6: Backward Design | Week 6 Instructions | week 6 instructions |
Backward Design chapter | chapter from the book Understanding by Design |
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What is backward design | summary of backward design principles |
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The Backward Design Process | a flowchart |
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Backward Design Template | form to fill out when thinking about the design of your courses/lessons |
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What is a big idea? | help for the first stage of backward design hint: national standards are typically full of the big ideas important in each discipline |
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What is an essential question? | help for the first stage of backward design |
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Six facets of understanding | quick summary |
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Understanding by Design workbook | to see some examples of lessons designed using backward design NOTE: it starts out with examples that are NOT designed using the backward design approach, so don't copy that :) |
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Week 7: Assessment | Week 7 Instructions |
notes for this week |
Formative Assessment | Formative assessment is much more effective at increasing student learning This paper summarizes research on formative assessment |
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Test-wiseness | Tips for making better quiz questions |
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Knowing What Students Know book | free online book See the assessment triangle |
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Classroom Assessment Techniques | see the left sidebar |
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More about Classroom Assessment Techniques | another page about CATs |
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Performance Assessments | Performance assessments are better than traditional assessments (like quizzes) at assessing student understanding. See this paper for more info on performance assessment. Use the File menu to download the pdf copy, since it is rotated sideways. You can right-click it or choose a menu option in your pdf viewer to rotate it, or just print it out. You might have students do something and then blog about it or discuss it or so forth, and perhaps use a rubric to evaluate it. |
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Rubistar: Create Rubrics Online | rubric tool You could just make a table in a moodle page, too |
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Rubric for Teacher Use of Backward Design | sample rubric |
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Rubric Samples for HIgher Education | sample rubrics |
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Week 8: Designing Effective E-Learning Activities | Week 8 Instructions | notes for this week |
Moodle 2.0 Guide for Teachers | illustrated guide to using moodle as a teacher |
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How to save the world with e-learning scenarios | nice presentation about how coming up with realistic scenarios and problems can make for more effective and engaging e-learning |
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10 ways to yawn-proof your e-learning | another guide with some good tips |
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Student perceptions of instructor-made videos | summary: students like them a lot and they can help make your online course better |
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The Head First formula | The "Head First" series of books are quite popular and effective. They use a lot of graphics and cognitive principles to help make topics more engaging and make learning from these books more effective. |
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Special Issue on e3-learning: effective, efficient, and engaging | Special issue on E3 learning. You'd need to use the VPN software ( http://library.usu.edu/elecres/off_campus.php) if you want to access the full text of the articles, or you can just skim the abstracts without accessing the full text. |
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Week 10: Learning Activities & Multimedia for your Moodle Project | Screencast-o-Matic | free site to make video screencasts and upload them directly to youtube (or download them in whatever format you want). Works in the browser (using java). See the demo video on the site for how to use it. Other alternatives include jing and camtasia. |
Another video on how to use the Feedback activity | which you can use to create your exit survey |
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Distance Education Tools Course Wiki | my summer course has links to several resources |
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Other Web 2.0 tools | like social bookmarking sites (like diigo), or sites that let you build professional communities (like ning.com), or sites like twitter or facebook. |
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Other resources on using video or screencasts | from my summer course |
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Week 11: Features of Good Online Courses/Training | Google Docs Notes on Statistics Courses | your thoughts |
Online Statistics Book | online textbook for learning statistics |
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Sampling Demo | applet illustrating sampling |
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CAST: Computer-Assisted Statistics Textbook (chap. 7) | see chapter 7 of the introductory book linked here
the main site is at: http://cast.massey.ac.nz/collection_public.html |
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HyperStat: Sampling Distributions | hypertext textbook |
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Wikipedia page on Sampling | sampling in statistics |
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Sampling Knowledgebase | see also the other sampling tutorial |
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Sampling Tutorial | from a web-based resource on social science research methods |
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SOCR: Statistics Online Computational Resource | it's hard to find info on sampling here though |
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Sampling Applet | from the SOCR project |
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HippoCampus: Statistics | See the sampling from a population link under the 'normal distribution' section |
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OLI Statistics Course | from the Open Learning Initiative See this research on its effectiveness: |
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Measuring the Effectiveness of the OLI statistics course | research paper |
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Statistics Video 1 | video of a class lecture |
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Statistics Video 2 | another video where population is described |
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Khan Academy Statistics Videos | very popular videos |
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Salman Khan TED Talk | interesting talk about what the Khan Academy is doing |
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Summary of contrasting cases | blog post about contrasting cases |
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Week 13: E-Learning Evaluation | Wikipedia article on Evaluation | good summary of the main points and issues |
Kirkpatrick's Four Levels of Evaluation | some have argued for a 5th level, see |
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Evaluation of eLearning for Best Practice Course | a free course |
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Evaluation Cookbook | a list of different evaluation techniques |
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Interactive Learning Systems Evaluation Resources | resources for another course on evaluation |
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Instructional Product Evaluation Resources | resources for another course on evaluation - of instructional products |
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CCLI Evaluation Planning Resources | see the checklist in particular |
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Evaluation Plan Checklist (for grant proposals) | I use OERL's evaluation plan resources when I write grant proposals |
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Multimedia Evaluation Resources | a bit out of date now, but I believe they are working on a new edition of this book |
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Multimedia for Learning Chapter Summaries | multimedia learning is the main topic for the rest of the semester. This is a great book on the topic, but it is very out of date now |
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Nick Eastmond's Research for the Classroom Teacher course materials | Evaluation and research have quite similar goals. Nick Eastmond teaches online courses in both - I recommend taking one of them if you can. |
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Rubric for Online Instruction | " This site is designed to answer the question being asked: What does a high quality online course look like? It is our hope that instructors and instructional designers will use this site to learn more about the Rubric for Online Instruction, and be able to view examples of exemplary courses that instructors have done in implementing the different components of the rubric." |
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Instructional Consultation | Resources and forms for doing instructional consulting |
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Instructional consulting in engineering education | A fuller article (no figures though) is here: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3886/is_200810/ai_n31110722/ |
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Instructional consulting at U. Washington | more resources on instructional consulting |
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Week 14: Multimedia Learning, Simulations, Games | Notes from class session | Sorry, I forgot to videorecord our speakers, but here are some notes on what we discussed |
Multimedia Learning Cheatsheet | 25 guiding principles, from U. Memphis |
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Analysis: How multimedia can improve learning | from eschoolnews |
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MERLOT: Database of multimedia materials | database |
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More multimedia learning & authoring resources | from my distance education tools course |
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Course redesign resources | Multimedia, and blended learning, is a key component |
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Video resources | Resources on using youtube and other video services in education |
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Student Perceptions of Instructor-Made Videos | The rise in online education, coupled with research suggesting the influence of instructor-learner interaction and frequency of student engagement with course materials on academic outcomes, highlight the need for innovative ways to keep the online learner connected to the course. This article describes results from a study conducted to examine students’ perceptions about the use of instructor-made videos that provided explanations of course assignments, syllabus requirements, discussed weekly topics, reviewed for exams, and answered student questions in video format in both a 100% online course and in several face-to-face courses. Student perceptions of this instructional strategy were overwhelmingly positive, with all of the students surveyed expressing satisfaction with this method of instructor-learner interaction. Open-ended answers revealed that students felt more connected to the instructor when able to view instructor-made videos. Descriptive results are provided for both the 100% online course and the face-to-face courses on variables related to frequency of viewing videos, purpose of videos viewed, and perceptions about the videos in regard to their experience with the course. Recommendations are also provided for online instructors interested in employing this teaching technique. |
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More resources on Video | from my distance education tools course |
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Review of research on simulations | chapter I wrote |
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Which comes first the simulation or the lecture? | A: the simulation Having an open ended or exploratory activity FIRST (like in problem-based learning) leads to better learning than lecturing first. |
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Simulations: Are they games? | Prensky article |
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Gas Box Simulation |
example of a simulation Look at how the man on the left "embodies" pressure, by having to push harder on the box wall - this exemplifies #2 in the cheat sheet: perceptual-motor grounding. You take an abstract concept like pressure and try to represent it in a concrete or embodied way. |
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Review of research on games | Microsoft report |
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Games, Learning, Society (GLS) conference proceedings | yearly conference on the topic of using games in education |
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Good Video Games and Good Learning | James Paul Gee |
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Simulations & Games for Education Course | just the readings (references) |
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Electric Field Hockey |
Example game. This is a good example of games vs. simulations. One isn't necessarily or inherently better than the other. See this paper that compared game vs. non-game versions of electric field hockey: |
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Virtual Worlds in Education summary | from EDUCAUSE |
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Lisa Dawley on instructional design in virtual worlds | summary of a talk |
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OpenSim | open source alternative to Second Life or (the older) ActiveWorlds |
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FernSeed | opensim project at USU |
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ScienceSim | hosted opensim sites for education and science |
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Second Life | free multiuser virtual world software |
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ISTE in Second Life | nice resources for teachers in second life guided tours, etc. AECT is also in second life: http://www.aect.org/Secondlife/default.asp and see Lisa Dawley's EDTECH island: http://edtechisland.wetpaint.com/ |
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SLOODLE: Second Life + Moodle | integrating the two |
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WebGL | 3D in the browser need Chrome or Firefox browser |
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KataSpace - Multi-user 3D in browser | first MUVE (multi-user virtual environment) that works in the browser with no plugins need chrome or firefox browser by KataLabs: http://www.katalabs.com/blog/ |
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Week 16: Final Multimedia Presentations | Project management software | Description of the qualities and characteristics of different types of project management software, along with criticisms, too. Microsoft Project is the traditional solution, but I might recommend checking out web-based options that let multiple people login and use it together. |
Comparison of project management software | Comparison of different software options Again, I might recommend checking out web-based alternatives And, more expensive doesn't mean better |
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Zoho Projects | free, web-based project management tool |
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OpenProj: Free, open source alternative to Microsoft Project | they also have a web-hosted version I believe |
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Alternatives to Basecamp | Basecamp is a pretty popular web-based project management site It does cost money though This site lists various alternatives |
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Project Management Knowledge Base | Huge dictionary/database of project management terms/knowledge |
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Project Management Quick Tips - Lesson 1 Video | video course on project management |
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Project Management Quick Tips - Lesson 2 Video | part 2 |
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Project Management Quick Tips - Lesson 3 | part 3 |