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Library Services for Staff: Online teaching

Teaching online.

Below are some resources that may help in creating online classes that will be engaging for your students.  

Good practice for teaching online suggestions

Seven Principles for Good Practice in Undergraduate Education

(Chickering & Gamson, 1987)

Online Teaching Applications

  1. Encourages contacts between students and faculty.
  • Hold electronic office hours
  • Instructor and student profile pages to get to know one another
  • Inform students when you will routinely check email (I check my email on Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons, etc.)
  • Use announcements, emails, and discussion forums
  1. Develops reciprocity and cooperation among students.
  • Discussion forums
  • Use Google Docs for collaborative work
  • Wikis
  • Group projects
  1. Uses active learning techniques.
  • Organize online courses around projects
  • Assign projects that end in a product that students present to the class
  • Involve students with case studies, vignettes and problem- based learning
  1. Gives prompt feedback.
  • Inform your students how long it will take to return work (I will grade these assignments within one week of receiving them.)
  • Use rubrics
  • Use Blackboard’s Gradebook features
  1. Emphasizes time on task.
  • Set definite deadlines
  • Send reminders or announcements about deadlines
  1. Communicates high expectations.
  • Use Rubrics to show expectations for participation and assignments
  • Regularly praise quality postings and participation
  • Give students examples of exemplary work
  1. Respect diverse talents and ways of learning.
  • Use a variety of mediums including videos, audio clips, PowerPoint, texts, etc.
  • Allow students to choose project topics that relate to their interest or work

 

Table courtesy of Duquesne university How to libguide: https://guides.library.duq.edu/c.php?g=590485&p=4082689

Video conferencing software

See videos below for how to use a range of available video conferencing software.

Microsoft Teams is available to all DkIT staff and students. It can be useful as it makes it easy to email your students directly with an invitation to a class or meeting.  It may lack the features of  the other options mentioned below. 

Zoom is a videoconferencing software package that can be used to give a classroom tutorial online. You can divide students into breakout rooms to encourage discussion. However, it must be noted that unless you have a premium account each session can only be 40 minutes. 

 Big Blue Button (in Moodle) can facilitate a virtual classroom.