Lessons Learned
Teaching Online
By George Siemens
Teaching online is a
unique experience in a unique medium. Many of the skills and attributes
of effective instruction in a classroom translate well to effective
instruction online. At the risk of sounding fairly absurd - teaching
online is very much like, and very much unlike, classroom teaching.
Processes & Core
Objectives of Teaching
Many of the tasks and
functions performed by an instructor online are similar to classroom.
For example, regardless of medium, learning is still the goal...and
learning happens through communication. Communication happens on several
fronts – student to student, student to teacher, student with content,
and in online learning, the addition of student with the interface of
technology. The critical aspects of learning (brain-compatible
classroom, learning styles, multiple intelligence, and emotional
intelligence. See
www.elearnspace.org/methodologiestheories.htm) don't vary
from online or classroom.
So what changes online?
If the process
(communication through variety of interactions) or core objectives
(increased student learning) don't change from classroom to online, what
does? The biggest change is the role and function of both the teacher
and the student. The teacher needs to shift perspective from the
"provider of knowledge", to a "facilitator of knowledge". The student
needs a similar shift – from passive learner to active learner.
Teaching online involves
acquiring a new set of beliefs about what it means to be a teacher.
The teacher's role online is to guide, direct, and equip students with
the skills and abilities to provide for their own educational needs in
the future.
“Teaching online involves
acquiring a new set of beliefs about what it means to be a teacher.”
The most effective way to
experience the differences of online learning is to actually teach
online. The following summarizes the lessons I’ve learned:
1.
New
students need time to acclimate to the environment.
Before students learn content, they learn how to access content through
technology tools. This process can be accomplished through effective
introductory tutorials or pre-course work teaching how the software
tools of the course work. Course designers should focus extensively on
how the first module (first impressions!) welcomes and orients students.
2.
Connect
emotionally first.
The most common complaint of students taking online or distance
education courses is the sense of isolation or loneliness. This is very
unfortunate. The Internet medium, when properly utilized, is about
connecting, not isolating, people. “Ice breaker” activities like asking
students to post a picture of themselves, their pet, or a favorite
cartoon help to create a sense of connection. An instructor should
always post a picture of him/herself with a welcoming introduction. This
introduction should not focus at all on the course work or content – it
should introduce the person on the other side of the course. This “warm
fuzzy” approach may not appeal to all students, but most will find it
very helpful.
3.
Explain
the environment.
New online students have spent years listening to lectures and expecting
teachers to tell them what to think and do. This doesn’t happen
online…but new students don’t know this. If a student is not aware of
the self-motivated, “everyone has a valuable opinion”, “knowledge is
created, not communicated”, aspect of learning online, she or he will be
very frustrated. It is the responsibility of the teacher to communicate
the environment to new students.
4.
Less
content, more interaction.
Online learning is not about content communication – it’s about
interaction. The content is communicated through the interaction.
5.
Sometimes, passivity is great!
In a classroom, a teacher provides a large part of the motivation to
learn. Online, students typically have to provide 100% of the
motivation. This is a reality of the medium. Effective online courses,
however, need to provide some passive learning activities. These
activities may include slides with audio, video presentation, Flash
demonstration, or synchronous presentations (like
www.horizonlive.com/ or
www.centra.com/). These activities help to increase student
motivation by providing a short “rest” before moving to more actively
engaged exercises.
6.
Encourage
reflection.
Learning happens during reflection. A student actively engaged is
generally not focused on reflection. Reflection occurs during “down”
moments. Reflection needs to be considered during both design and
teaching phases of online courses. Reflective journals can be included
to allow instructors the opportunity to evaluate student learning.
7.
Simplicity. Keep things simple.
One place for all memos. One place to post assignments. Too many tools
and multiple processes can overwhelm new students. The student should
not spend too much time learning tools, especially at the expense of
content and interaction.
8.
Account
for the “soft side”.
Give students a place to complain. Most often, a student’s frustration
is minimized when he/she feels understood by the instructor. Instructors
should contact students fairly early in a course and ask for comments,
concerns, and frustrations. I’ve been in online courses where other
students have dialogued about frustrations using email under the radar
of the Instructor. End result – if an environment isn’t created that
allows for venting, students will create it privately.
9.
Variety.
Variety. Variety.
Students crave variety. Plan for different forms of content
presentation, student activities, group work, and individual exercises.
When learning online, a change really is as good as a rest.
10.
Experiment. An instructor should constantly be experimenting.
Student feedback should be solicited throughout and at the end of a
course. These comments are then used as the premise for instructor
experimentation to make the online experience more effective. Word of
caution: As critical as experimentation is online, it needs limits. For
myself, I set boundaries of experimentation to “those activities that do
not impact the student’s learning”…unless a group of students agrees to
a pilot outside of the scope of a course. This is how I initially began
using
www.groove.net/. The lessons learned were invaluable for
eliminating inefficiencies for my first “live” Groove class.
11.
The
instructor as an active facilitator.
This is the biggest change for most instructors. Teaching online is a
facilitative process. The notion of “I provide knowledge, and students
learn” needs to be replaced with “I guide and direct students to a
variety of resources and encourage critical thinking and reflection
about the concepts encountered”. As well, an instructor needs to be
active. Regular discussion posts, personal emails, supportive
statements, and challenging questions let students know that the
instructor is accessible.
12.
Centering
Point. A
classroom is the centering point for traditional students. This is where
they go to ask questions, find out where they are in relation to the
course objectives, get feedback on work, or generally get clarification
on virtually any subject. Online, a similar centering point needs to be
created. It may be a detailed course schedule, a blog maintained by the
instructor, or a dedicated discussion forum for posting reminders and
notices to students.
The highest objective of
education is to improve the quality of life for students and to create a
better society. This may be achieved through student self-awareness,
learning through exploring new concepts, connecting previously unrelated
field of knowledge and increased confidence. Online learning has much to
offer in achieving these ideals. However, in order for the potential to
be fully realized, instructors and educators need to dialogue about what
constitutes effective learning online. What is different? What is
unique? What is the same? The goal in teaching online is to retain the
best of classrooms and improve the worst.