Wow, the school year starts on Monday. Where did the summer go?!
One highlight of my summer was the 2014 COLTT conference, it was a blast! It is always nice to be around like minded folks. The conference always inspires me to try something new for the fall semester, and this year was no exception. Before I can talk about my plans for this year, I need to go back a bit.
Last year, thanks to COLTT, I added social media, namely a Google+ community, into my class. Using a private Google site (meaning I had to manually add each student to the site) as my course management system, I created a Google community to add a two way or social experience to my class. Things went okay, watch for a update later in the year with updates from a satisfaction survey, but I felt they could have been better. The website seemed to get in the way, and made the Google community less effective because students could stay on the site, read the instructions, then post to the community and leave. There was very little in the way of Peer to Peer conversations.
This year, all that changes! At least I hope. Thanks to Marc Mueller, who is a big proponent of open access content and works for a company making that easier, I am ditching the learning management system and moving my class directly into a social world! Everything will be posted into the Google community: readings, assignments and rubrics, discussion prompts, and the syllabus. Students will be encouraged to engage with each other, offer critique, and help their peers learn. Learning is a social thing, and humans are social animals, which could explain our current love of social media.
Hopefully, by midterms, I will have some mid-semester feedback from this year so I can compare it to last year. There are some confounding variables here, last year I taught in a larger school, 17000, while this year there are only 3000. My hope is the spirit of the course, a first year success seminar, will reveal some reliable correlations. Stay tuned for updates!
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