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jspohrer's picture

Five Models for Blended Learning

What exactly IS blended learning? The term (along with its analogue "hybrid" learning) is broadly used to describe individual courses or educational programs that combine "traditional" classroom-based teaching and computer-aided learning outside the classroom. This is a very broad umbrella, however, and I get many questions attempting to clarify what counts and doesn't count or what blended learning looks like on the ground in more concrete terms. 

The National Center for Academic Transformation has developed a taxonomy of blended learning models that might provide some clarity to those new to the subject and inspiration for faculty looking for ways to transform a "traditional" course into a blended one.

blendedlearning's picture

The Growth of 'Adaptive Learning' Technologies

Over the last few years, "adaptive learning" technologies have gotten validation from mainsteam education publishing companies like McGraw-Hill Education and Pearson Education, as Pearson began to integrate new adaptive learning softwares from Knewton into their own software and McGraw-Hill purchased ALEKS Corporation. Though both companies had online textbooks already in existence, the move to embrace adaptive learning technology reflects an effort to create more interactive, more individualized experiences. Early this year, The Chronicle of Higher Education published The Object Formerly Known as the Textbook discussing the potential risks and benefits of transitioning to adaptive learning technologies, as well as making the valid point that although publishers have begun to splurge on software companies and building up digital capabilities, very few textbooks today are born-digital.

jrlewis's picture

Copper Mine

If horses were wishes… 

 

I would have taken the horse

on trial, for two weeks before I left for Iowa City. 

 

Would he stay sound?

He has four off-white hooves and they have tender frogs

 

in the spring grass.  I’ve never had a horse with so much chrome. 

He was very fancy. 

 

How would I win the hack? 

This horse would tell me how to ride him, not why.  His mouth was soft,

but his head was hard.

 

Was he too much horse for me?

Sometimes, I would have to be closing my fingers on the curb chain,

 

hoping to hold him back, back him off, half halt.  I must make contact from

my hands to his head.  I was afraid of failing. 

 

This horse as he was?

I was afraid of falling from him.  I was afraid of falling for him. 

 

What do I know?

I am afraid of heights, though this horse, he has kind eyes.

 

How like a bridge is a horse truly? 

 

A horse can carry a person across a bridge, closing up the distance.

Oh dear, difference is seductive.

blendedlearning's picture

Thinking Context: No More Writing "Workshop"

Thinking Context is a recent post by John Warner on his Inside Higher Ed blog, "Just Visiting," where Warner considers and discusses the implications of the language educators use. Regardless of whether or not the particular terms he discusses - peer review vs. peer response, workshop vs. laboratory, research paper vs. researched essay, etc - are relevant to your field and your classroom, he raises important points about the necessity of deliberate language in the classroom. These standardized education terms, as he points out, are often communicating more than we intend, and can set an unintended tone for assignments and activities.

While Warner's article is focused on the traditional classroom, his argument has interesting implications for the world of blended education, where the terminology is less established, less conventional, and more flexible. As we are beginning to arrive at mutually agreed upon and communally understood language, it's important to think through the implications of the terminology which is gaining traction.

blendedlearning's picture

Interactive Resources in Moodle

If you would like to create your own interactive materials, Moodle offers several advantages. In addition to being relatively easy to use, even without coding ability, Moodle's extensive wiki "MoodleDocs" is full of instructions, explanations, and best practice suggestions.

Related resources:
Creating Quizzes on Moodle
Creating Flashcards on Moodle
Moodle Scheduler

blendedlearning's picture

WebWriting: Why & How for Liberal Arts Teaching and Learning

WebWriting is a born-digital, open-access "book-in-progress" sponsored by the Trinity College Center for Teaching and Learning. It deals with issues concerning when, how, and why the web can be used for teaching writing by incorporating essay concerning basic but difficult questions about the risks and benefits of using the web, reconfiguring pedagogy to use online resources, and finding the right tools. The book also deals with specific issues like "How to organize simultaneous peer review with Google Doc" and "Balancing Public Writing and Student Privacy". The site is powered by WordPress's CommentPress Corp plugin, which allows users to interact with the text by leaving comments on sections, pages, or the entire document. The book also includes an annotated "Bibliography-in-progress," complete with links to the cited sources, which creates a small but concise resource library for users interested in the topics WebWriting approaches.

jspohrer's picture

Blended Learning Conference Take-Aways

I was struck by two themes running through the conference presentations this year:

First, the importance of "closing the loop," or bringing the online components of a blended course back into the classroom in some way. Kristine Rabberman, for example, talked about the importance of opening class discussions with insightful observations, questions, or debates from her course's online discussion boards and blogs, as part of her strategy for fostering a deeper, sustained intellectual conversation online and in the classroom. This resonated with feedback we received on student surveys of courses that were part of the NGLC blended learning study project. Rightly or wrongly, students perceived online work that was not recognized in some way as being unimportant or ancillary to the course. Making these activities "low-stakes" (i.e., giving some points or credit for completing them) rather than "no-stakes" was one common mechanism faculty used to signal that online materials were important, but student survey responses and experiences faculty shared suggest that discussing students' online work in class as Kristine did or explicitly communicating how you are using student's online work to diagnose and address problems -- for example, by going over a problem you noticed students were having trouble with in online homework, might be as, if not more, effective. 

CFS's picture

CFS Poster Presentation 2013

Jessica Ziplin

 

Josephine Nyame

joey poster

Sarah Buonano

sarah poster

Ellen Vari

ellen vari

Farah Kahn

jspohrer's picture

Blended Learning Conference Recordings Available

First, I would like to thank everyone who helped to make this year's Blended Learning in the Liberal Arts Conference a success. Our in-house catering, conference, and housekeeping teams and my student assistants, Yichen Liao and Angela Rosenberg, did a stellar job of making sure we were well-fed and everything ran smoothly behind the scenes. The fact that they were able to do so immediately following Bryn Mawr's graduation celebrations (and for the students, weeks of exams) is a testament to their talent and dedication!

I would also like to thank our 15 presenters, who agreed to expose their teaching and their discoveries to public scrutiny, so that we all might learn from the experience. Recordings of their presentations and any slides and materials they've shared are archived on our conference website -- just click on the title of a presentation in the schedule to see everything associated with it.

The conference was a huge success, attracting about 100 registered guests from over 30 institutions, not counting many Tri-College faculty and staff who dropped into sessions as their schedules permitted. As always audience questions and comments and the informal conversations over breaks and lunch were one of the most valuable and interesting aspects of the event.

jspohrer's picture

July 18 Webinar on Sloan–C Blended Learning Mastery Series

The Sloan Consortium is offering a Blended Learning Mastery Series designed to help faculty develop effective blended courses. The series consists of three workshops spaced about a month apart to allow time for personal reflection and incorporation: research and design, teaching techniques, and assessment techniques. The next series runs from August 16, 2013 - October 25, 2013, and costs $599, which includes a certificate upon successful completion. For more information, Sloan-C is hosting a free webinar on July 18.

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