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Online Format

Started by HigherEd7, November 09, 2019, 04:43:31 PM

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HigherEd7

Curious to know what format other teachers are using in their online course shell. I normally just use week by week with the week number and date. I tried using the module folders this semester, which shows the table of contents and it looks crowded. Any tips for developing a clean online course shell?

ZeChocMoose

I usually do the week number and topic for each folder and sometimes I have the overarching question(s) that they are learning about for that module.  I also order the folders so that the most recent folder is at the top of the page (instead of the bottom) so students don't have to scroll.  I don't do the date because it makes it easier to repurpose the structure of the course for the next time that I teach the course.

HigherEd7

Do you give weekly quizzes or do you wait a couple of weeks?

Antiphon1

Check with your chair.  Some places dictate the frequency of grade posting/student interaction.  If you are required to update your grades every Friday or your students must participate in a weekly forum then using a weekly schedule might make sense.  My classes use a unit organization covering several weeks because this method gives me and the students more flexibility. 

There really isn't a set in stone standard.  How do you pace your on campus classes?  Your online classes will probably follow a similar rhythm.  The primary concern should be providing incremental and periodic feedback so the students know how they are progressing in the class. 

pepsi_alum

My last place strongly encouraged instructors to group content by modules rather than weeks, because it supposedly makes it easier to convert the course to a different length of time (for example, from 16 weeks to 8 weeks). I get this idea in theory but it often didn't work very well in practice. Thus, I tended to group by weeks as well.

Like  Antiphon1 says, the pacing can vary by course, but make sure you understand campus expectations.

spork

Not quite what you asked, but thought it might be helpful:

http://activelearningps.com/2014/07/11/teaching-tips-for-online-courses/.

My university uses Canvas for its LMS. I use modules, organized on the Modules page chronologically, and I make this the course homepage that students land on. I list assignments chronologically on the Assignments page, a page that Canvas creates automatically.
It's terrible writing, used to obfuscate the fact that the authors actually have nothing to say.

HigherEd7


When developing your course do you learning modules or do you develop a content folder and create items in the folder to list your content? I am using blackboard 9.1. I am just trying to develop a nice clean look.



Quote from: spork on December 22, 2019, 03:30:33 PM
Not quite what you asked, but thought it might be helpful:

http://activelearningps.com/2014/07/11/teaching-tips-for-online-courses/.

My university uses Canvas for its LMS. I use modules, organized on the Modules page chronologically, and I make this the course homepage that students land on. I list assignments chronologically on the Assignments page, a page that Canvas creates automatically.

Mobius

Quote from: HigherEd7 on November 09, 2019, 04:43:31 PM
Curious to know what format other teachers are using in their online course shell. I normally just use week by week with the week number and date. I tried using the module folders this semester, which shows the table of contents and it looks crowded. Any tips for developing a clean online course shell?

It depends on the class. Modules are better suited for my upper-division courses where the reading load and assignments are more in depth. I organize my lower-division classes by weeks.