Pilot of MOOC
Dear colleagues
This week we begin the enrollment of the 80 plus new teaching staff who have expressed interest in enrolling in our pilot MOOC Contemporary approaches to university teaching.
The last few months have seen Linden, Josh, David and myself compiling, editing, loading and formatting the modules into the MOOC platform. Each module should take participants approximately 2 hours to complete.
Each module has been reviewed by content experts and the MOOC itself has been reviewed by over a dozen colleagues.
If you are interested in seeing the pilot MOOC, please contact Linden Clarke (lindenclarke@swin.edu.au) who can enrol you as a guest.
We will be back in August to update you on the pilot. We will also begin to load posts by colleagues who have written articles/theses on teaching induction and related areas.
Cheers
Kym
Sunday, 25 June 2017
Wednesday, 26 April 2017
The Teaching Today’s Diverse Learners module
The Teaching Today’s Diverse Learners module that Teresa De
Fazio and I have been working on is aimed at supporting participants to think
more deeply about the diverse student cohorts entering higher education and the
richness this offers to the learning and teaching experience.
The module is designed to be taken after completion of the Learning and Teaching Theories and
Principles and Collaborative
Learning: Profiting from Peer Power modules and is intended to build on
what participants learned in those modules. Given the breadth of ideas related
to diversity we encourage participants to think about what diversity looks like
in their teaching contexts, the support for both staff members and students
that is available within their institutions and most importantly how they work
with diversity so that students feel part of a more inclusive, motivated and inspired
learning culture. The module involves the following sections:
- Introductory Activity: Who are we referring to when we consider diversity?
- Reflection: Acknowledgement of country
- Defining diversity
- Who are we actually talking about when we consider diversity in higher education?
- Responding through practical strategies
- Determining the role of the university and its staff
- Final reflection, review and next steps
Each one comprises self-paced activities including videos;
readings and reflection exercises. Is there anything missing from the list? We
realise it may be difficult to respond as you cannot see what each area
includes, but we are trying to determine if there is anything more general that
we may be missing, bearing in mind that the idea of this module is to help
staff think about how to best support students to learn, it is not about
specifically addressing a particular cohort in relation to their diverse needs
but thinking about how to be inclusive so all students regardless of their
background feel they can participate and learn.
We look forward to hearing from you.
Ann Luzeckyj and Teresa de Fazio
Wednesday, 19 April 2017
To quiz or not to quiz?
Dear All
Colleagues from 19 Australian universities are contributing to the development of the ‘Contemporary Australian Teaching Practices’ MOOC which we will pilot in semester 2, 2017. As the MOOC is designed specifically for university staff who are new to teaching, we have designed it to introduce basic concepts such as how to provide constructive feedback or teach a diversity of students. Ideally I would like to see our new teaching colleagues spend about two hours a week across a semester, exploring a different topic every week.
However, it is possible that some colleagues who have been teaching previously will access the MOOC. While I want to encourage people to dip into all of the 11 modules, people will of course, pick and choose what is of value to them: just in time, just for me.
I wonder if it would be useful therefore to have say one multiple choice question from each module in a preliminary ‘self assessment’ quiz, which colleagues could use to guide their choices.
What do you think? To quiz or not to quiz???
Cheers
Kym
Wednesday, 29 March 2017
Quality Assurance and our responsibilities: a module under development
Julie Fleming and Kogi Nadioo are developing the module on 'Quality Assurance and our responsibilities helping guide your career development’. Our introduction should provide you with enough information to help demonstrate where we are taking the module. We’d be happy for your feedback.
In this module you will gain an understanding of the overarching learning and teaching frameworks that assure the quality of Australia¹s higher education providers, including your institution. We start by examining the overarching regulatory body TEQSA (Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency) https://education.gov.au/final-proposed-higher-education-standards-framework, whose role is to safeguard the interests of students as well as to accredit our courses and units. From January 2017, a new regulatory framework applies to all registered providers of higher education in Australia. The framework is known as the Higher Education Standards Framework and it describes a range of specifically developed threshold standards all institutions must meet.
Our responsibility as educators is to understand these requirements, ensuring compliance. A second important framework governing our institutions is the AQF (Australian Qualifications Framework). This framework is the national policy for determining Australian qualifications in education.
Moving on from these overarching regulatory frameworks, we will then examine your institution¹s related policies and procedures that help assure and enhance the quality of course learning and teaching. This will include understanding your role as an educator and the impact of, for example, policies and guidelines relating to academic integrity and your institution¹s code of conduct.
Another important consideration is collecting and examining different datasets to inform the assurance of those standards. These include internal unit and teaching evaluations and external data including Quality Indicators for Learning and Teaching (QILT).
Our aim is that you are continually reflecting on the impact of your academic/professional role through quality enhancement and alignment with internal and external frameworks supporting the quality of learning and teaching. Upon completion of this module, you will develop a personal development plan, based on your choice of a professional development standards framework, that will support you in completing your probation requirements and/or set you up to progress in your higher education career.
Julie and Kogi
Wednesday, 22 March 2017
Scholarly teaching and scholarship of teaching: continually improving your teaching
We are developing the module on scholarly teaching and sotl.
This module is expected to provide 2 hours of engagement by the participants.
So the module is a practical introduction to the concepts and at the end, we
will direct people who want to engage further, to resources/literature.
The ‘table of contents’ for the module is given below. What
we want to do in the module is introduce new teaching staff to the difference
between being a scholarly teacher and engaging in the scholarship of teaching.
We’ll ask staff to: view a video clip of international colleagues discussing
their definitions of SoTL; skim a chapter on the benefits of SoTL; and find a
teaching and learning journal in their discipline.
Then we plan to introduce the different types of evaluation
strategies that can be used to improve teaching and collect evidence to improve
student learning and for probation, promotion, teaching awards. This work will
be based on the 2009 Light, Cox and Caulkin evaluation chapter in their book
“Learning and teaching in higher education”. Strategies include things like
peer review, buzz groups, questionnaires, reflective triads, and focus groups.
In terms of activities, we will ask participants to try one of the strategies.
As we are in the process of finalising our module, we would appreciate
your thoughts on the current approach to the module and our questions below.
- Can you suggest great resources that we simply must include?
- Are there particular (short) activities that we might consider?
- Any other feedback?
Module table of
contents
Welcome video (introduction to the module)
Context and definitions
Teaching and learning scholars
Why take a scholarly teaching approach?
Concerns about SoTL (the pros and cons of engaging in
L&T research)
Where do I start?
Using evaluation to improve your students’ learning
- Buzz groups
- Peer review of teaching
- Questionnaires
- Etc
Where do I get help from/go from here?
Using SoTL and scholarly teaching to progress your career
Resources
Kym Fraser, Swinburne University of Technology
Bernie Fisher, Australian Catholic University
Wednesday, 15 March 2017
Learning and Teaching Theories – a module under development
We have undertaken to develop the
module on learning and teaching theories for the Induction program.
One of the reasons for our
interest in this particular topic was that both of us have had extensive
experience in assisting applicants for Learning and Teaching grants and awards,
and in preparing and mentoring staff for Higher Education Academy Fellowships.
In both these mentoring roles, we have found that most applicants have little
knowledge of the higher education literature, and the long history of
educational research, principles of teaching, and how students learn. Nor can
staff readily call on theory to support their learning and teaching approaches
and practices. At best, there may be a single reference in applications to
Biggs and Tang (which is of course, a standard text in higher education), or a
brief reference to Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development, as an argument for
‘social learning’.
As teaching academics, we need to
be ‘double professionals’ who know about not only the seminal work in our
discipline field, but also how that discipline is best taught. There are
specialist journals in teaching particular disciplines and professions, and the
module on Scholarly Teaching directs your attention to such journals, but there
is a rich literature in learning and teaching in general, and if you are to
think reflectively and deeply about your practices for teaching students
effectively, you should have some knowledge of this literature, and the
significant theories that shape or have shaped our current pedagogies. We would
have liked to have included a lot more in our module but it was not feasible
given the limited amount of time participants will have to spend on each
module.
Our module so far consists of some
learning activities, video sections, some links to several short documents, and
an MCQ, to ‘test’ that you have a very basic knowledge of the education
theorists. It also, as a stretch activity, includes making a voki, to encourage
participants to use a free app that may open up a world of new technologies
that can be used to engage students in this digital world. The voki
activity is at the icebreaker level. It starts to get participants thinking
about articulating their first thoughts about their philosophies of teaching.
Participants will need to continue to grapple with the development of their
teaching philosophies and may need some other form of professional development,
like mentoring to fully develop written artefacts.
We would welcome any comments you have for the scope of the module, and any resources we might consider essential.
Sue Bolt and Yoni Ryan
Monday, 6 March 2017
Planning for Learning – a module in development!
One of the first modules that participants in our teaching induction MOOC can choose to work through is the 'Planning for Learning' module. Below Sally and Rosie talk about the approach that they are taking in the module and ask for any thoughts, resources, activities that they might find useful in their module. Each module aims to engage participants for no more than two hours, however the module can provide extension resources for those participants who want to explore the topic further.
There are no surprises in the statement
that the process of developing this module mirrors the process of planning for
learning per se! It was tempting to
submit the many iterations of the module as a demonstration of the iterative
process that often reflects the planning process. Having gone through the process we have
settled on the following key elements around which to focus the module. We begin with the context as that provides an overall framework for learning. In the
context we briefly consider who are the students, where will the learning occur,
what the purpose of the learning is and what resources are available. The focus
then shifts to the outcomes for the
learning - so what are the learning outcomes for the material being taught and
how are these outcomes to be assessed?
Our module then asks the question ‘How does learning happen?’ by which
we introduce learning strategies by way of learning
tasks as the method for the learning to occur. The emphasis here is to move the participant
from telling their student all there is to know about their unit to have their
students actively involved in developing the knowledge and skills required of
the unit. This section will also incorporate timing and lesson structure. The fourth
section centres on utilising checking strategies to gauge the learning progress within
their sessions. The participants will be
asked to utilise a graphic organiser to reflect on these aspects of planning as
it relates to their institution and the teaching of their discipline.
Additional resources will be linked to the module eg lesson plan templates,
learning strategies and learning tasks and weblinks for further support and
ideas.
We are not quite finished with our module
as yet so are happy to have any questions, thoughts or ideas sent our way for
further consideration!
Rosie Greenfield and Sally Gauci - Victoria University
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