Dee and Michael,

I’ve been teaching in a hybrid International Executive MBA program for many years.  The courses typically begin with a few live sessions during the students’ 2-week “residential” period.  Then we have 6 months of asynchronous online sessions.  I love the online sessions; they proceed to deeper levels than is possible in the limited time of a live class.  My sessions last for four days, and most students add about one posting per day.  In this program, I have taught introductory financial accounting, introductory cost accounting, and management control systems.  I use slightly different types of assignments and questions in the introductory courses versus the strictly case-based MCS course.  Like Michael, my students prepare with readings and group assignments.

 

A few years ago, I tried a similar approach for a couple of weeks in a live evening MBA program.  Although the students told me that they preferred live sessions, I found that the quality of the discussion was quite high—same as in my IXMBA courses.

 

For me, the key to active and high-quality discussions is setting up separate threads for different topics.  I ask questions to start each thread, and then add comments as needed to prompt consideration of additional issues.  The only downside for me is the time; I spent much more time on an online session than on an equivalent live session.

Susan

 

 

 

 

From: For college professors globally, to dialogue about course design. [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Thomas Michael Power
Sent: Monday, June 21, 2010 7:03 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: RE : Designing Better Learning Experiences: Updates on Website + Question

 

Hi Dee,

 

Yes, indeed. I started teaching online using a combination of a basic website and a virtual classroom about 10 years ago. Rather early on in online learning, I realized that developing a full-blown website was prohibitively time-consuming and simply an exercise in futility since updating it in a timely fashion became a virtual impossibility. I also realized that teaching online asynchronously was... well, boring. I missed the spontaneous debating, the back 'n forth, the warmth of verbal contact that had mad eme become a university professor in the first place. So I lessened my dependance on asynch and added the synch classroom and have never looked back. I now teach graduate courses only and I get the chance to work with highly-motivated students from across the country and even overseas. They are all present and accounted for, every Tuesday afternoon from 4:30 to 7:30 PM with a 20-minute break in the middle, just like on-campus. Students tell me that the much-vaunted 24/7 online course ends up being 0/0 since, for some reason or another, they say they never seem to get around to doing the work required in an online course. They say they feel isolated and unmotivated.

 

In a nutshell, I try to run my seminar just as I would on campus. Students do have some individual work to do before class - reading - but they tend to do it because they also have a team assignment that requires they do it. The peer commitment seems to make it all work in that they come to class prepared to debate, discuss and examine concepts and principles embedded in the readings and discussed within their teams, in either synch or asynch mode.

 

I've added some references below for your perusal.

 

Michael

 
@@@@@@@@
Dr. Michael Power
Professor & Programs Director - Educational Technology
Faculty of Education - Université Laval
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New article (ENG): http://www.jofde.ca/index.php/jde/article/view/649
2008 book (FR):
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2009 book (ENG):
http://www.aupress.ca/index.php/books/120161 (09/09)
2010 talk (ENG):
http://cider.athabascau.ca/CIDERSessions/sessionarchive
2010 talk (ENG) http://edtechtalk.com/node/4722
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De : Dee Fink [[log in to unmask]]
Date d'envoi : 21 juin 2010 21:09
À : [log in to unmask]
Cc : Thomas Michael Power
Objet : Designing Better Learning Experiences: Updates on Website + Question

Hi Everyone,

 

I just wanted to alert you that the page on "Design Forms & Tips" (under "Resource Downloads") has been re-organized and several new items have been added.

 

Question:

Does anyone have a "success story" they would like to share on the listserv?   Posting this would allow people to ask questions about how it works, and what problems they had to overcome.

 

Michael Powers emailed me a month or two ago, about an online course which he designed to include both synchronous and asynchronous activities that seemed to be quite valuable. 

      Michael:  Would you mind sharing that with people on the listserv?

 

We would love to also hear "success stories" from others as well!

 

Thanks,    Dee



--
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L. Dee Fink          
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**National Project Director:  Teaching & Curriculum Improvement (TCI) Project
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**Author of: Creating Significant Learning Experiences
**Former President of the POD Network in Higher Education (2004-2005)