Monday, September 12, 2011

EIDT 6510

Online learning is an interesting and challenging concept. One of the things that interested me was the chance to make my classes more interactive when the resources are tight. Looking back at the last course that was taken by me online fit right into the foundations and major concepts that Dr. Pratt and Dr. Palloff (2011) stated; the course was a learning community. The interesting part about the learning community system that is used by Walden was setup and running without me even knowing that was the principle focus. The interaction between the students and instructor was a great experience. The role of the instructor was equal and the learning mostly occurred from peer-peer interaction. The only con from the last course was the time it took the instructor to grade and give feed-back to assignments. Sometimes the next assignment was due before feed-back was given on the previous assignment.
The principles that were aligned in the previous course were the achievement of the course objectives through engaging activities; achievement of developing a learning community (LC) between the learners/instructor; reflection of the knowledge obtained throughout the course; increased learner self-directed focus; and learning was conveyed by the peer-to-peer interaction (Palloff & Pratt, 2011).
The last course was completely converted for the online environment. The course was not just taken from the traditional classroom and placed online. The course was interactive, engaging and student focused. The instruction came from the equal partnership between the learners and the instructor, not a silo-instructed course. Dr. Saba (2011) discussed that when using learning strategies they should be established and backed by supported evidence of success. The theories that are questionable should not be used. The major focus of the course should first be the foundation of the theories, the knowledge of the field (course related), the concepts and principles used (to develop knowledge), and making the instruction effective for the learner (Saba, 2011).
The only improvements that I saw for the previous class would be the decrease in amount of time for graded assignments. The major problem was that you could not improve or correct any problems before the next assignment was due. The interaction between the instructor and the learner with requirements and corrections was a huge factor for me. In the engagement model that was discussed by Conrad (2004) the principles and problem-based learning are essential for a learning community that is engaged. With the previous course the principles and problem-based learning were there, however the maximum learning for me could not occur because of late input by the instructor. I was not able to transfer the needed information missed from each assignment to the next.
Sources:
Conrad, R., & Donaldson, J. A. (2004). Engaging the online learner: Activities and resources for creative instruction. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Palloff, R., Pratt, K. (2011). Online Learning Communities. Walden Video Library.
Saba, F. (2011). Evaluating Distance Learning Theory. Walden Video Library.

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