Sloan-C 2010 Online Workshop Series

Sloan-C workshops are the smart way to support continuous professional development. Each workshop is developed by practitioners for practitioners; enabling thousands of colleagues worldwide to collaborate cost effectively with peers and experts, via real-time and asynchronous meetings. These workshops are 2 to 4 weeks long, and have been widely acclaimed among professional development organizations in online education. To register: http://www.sloanconsortium.org/workshops/upcoming

* Subject to change

JANUARY Dates Facilitators Description
Dynamic Collaboration, Discussion, and Facilitation Practices 1/6 – 1/15 Bill Pelz
John Thompson
Yuanqiong "Kathy" Wang

Herkimer County Community College
In the online classroom, interaction prompts more interaction by stimulating more perspectives, points of view, ideas, questions, and disagreements. Through collaboration and discussion, both facilitators and students help each other in the learning process.

Objectives:
  • Increase and provide quality engagement in an online academic environment
  • Discussion thread design: threading, pace, sequencing discussion prompts, using Socratic dialog, modeling reflective exchange, and closing down an exchange
  • Help students communicate clearly without the aid of nonverbal communication cues
  • Create exemplary exchanges
Advanced Second Life 1/ 6 – 1/15 Cathy Arreguin
San Diego State University
This workshop advances the skills of intermediate users (who have taken the level 2 workshop or its equivalent) to develop Second Life pedagogy, to design environments, and manage tools.

Objectives:
  • Develop Second Life skills to support pedagogy
  • Become well-versed in: seating areas, display panels, voice/text sessions, session recording, groups (creation, messaging, management), basic building, basic texturing (importing and using graphics), basic interactions (modifying easy scripts for instructional use)
Accommodating
Students with Disabilities:
Leveraging the
Online Learning Environment
1/6 - 1/15 Jane Jarrow
Disability Compliance in Career and Online Learning (DCCOL)
Traditional institutions of higher education that have made significant commitments to newly-constituted online programs need to understand how existing disability services units can absorb the need for serving online students with disabilities. They need to know the legal mandates that obligate them to provide support to online students with disabilities and to understand how to fulfill the obligation to serve this often ignored population.

Objectives:
  • Develop an understanding of accommodations for ensuring complete access and full participation in the educational process
  • Become sensitive to non-visible or hidden disabilities
  • Follow effective teaching practices that will benefit all students
  • Develop alternative activities that achieve the same learning outcomes for all
  • Leverage technological alternatives to help disabled students
Online Teaching Certificate Foundation Course 1/13 - 3/19
(Note: 9 Weeks)
Julia Parra
New Mexico State University
The Sloan-C Certificate prepares faculty to teach and improve online courses using the Sloan-C pillars of quality in online education--learning effectiveness, scale, faculty and student satisfaction, and access.  Each candidate studies with a mentor and a small cohort of peers during the foundation course, a nine-week sequence of activities that include:
  • Using technologies for building your individual online teaching portfolio
  • Consulting with your mentor to develop a learning plan that matches your context and portfolio goal
  • Developing your course and receiving incremental feedback on it from peers and mentors
  • Applying quality metrics
  • Preparing to use new insights from elective workshops, peers and mentor
Copyright Compliance for Online Educators 1/13 – 1/22  Linda Enghagen 
University of Massachusetts - Amherst
Online educators need to understand personal liability for copyright infringement when using materials to supplement an online course. Copyright owners have sued and will continue to sue individuals. You also need to know how your original works can be protected. Publishers and the academic community have established a set of educational fair use guidelines to provide standards and protection for educators.

Objectives:
  • Learn six rules for course design
  • Be familiar with fair use guidelines for public domain resources
  • Be able to share and protect original work that is published online
Getting Started: The First Step Toward Online
Teaching (open workshop & pre-reqruisite for the Online Teaching Certificate
1/27 – 2/12 Sharon Taylor
Colorado Community College System
Getting Started: The First Step Toward Online Teaching is a prerequisite to the Sloan-C Certificate program. This workshop introduces potential faculty and/or administrators to online education fundamentals. You will not only discuss the concepts but use the technologies to gain practical "hands-on" experience.

Objectives:
  • Compare face to face and online teaching, including expectations, role adjustments, and course design
  • Apply the principles of effective participation through chat and discussion
  • Use synchronous and asynchronous technologies
  • Prepare for managing online classes, workload and resources
Web Accessibility for Online Learning: A How-To Guide for Creating Accessible Content        1/19 – 1/29 Marc Thompson
University of Illinois
Norm Coombs
Equal Access to Software & Information
Hadi Rangin
University of Illinois
Universal design seeks to make online learning available and accessible for all types of learners. Universal design is not a template approach to instructional design; rather, the philosophy emphasizes learning objectives need to be flexible to meet diverse needs. Online faculty often find themselves overwhelmed or too busy with their day-to-day responsibilities to fully appreciate and integrate the various tools that can be used to make learning  equitable, flexible, and adaptable.

Objectives:
  • Develop an understanding of their institution’s learning management platform and how they can develop and integrate content following the principles of universal design
  • Receive an introduction to assistive technology and how it is utilized by individuals who are visually-impaired
FEBRUARY Dates Facilitators Description
Designing Blended Courses and Building a
Blended Learning Community
2/8 – 3/1 Alan Aycock, Tanya Joosten, 
Robert Kaleta, Amy Mangrich,
Matt Russell 

University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
A significant amount of learning has been moved online making it possible to reduce the amount of time spent in class. Blended courses attempt to combine the best elements of traditional face-to-face instruction with the best aspects of distance education. Faculty can teach in new ways and students are more accountable for their own learning.

Objectives:
  • Reconceive your traditional face-to-face courses for blended teaching and learning
  • Follow backwards design principles to design a course module
  • Build learning community by adopting effective practices for asynchronous discussion
  • Learn techniques for integrating face-to-face and online work, and apply them to your own courses
Online Learing and the Military Student: How You can Better Serve Those Who Serve 2/10 – 2/19  Frank McCluskey
American Public University System
The 911 GI bill is in the Headlines. This bill encourages more service people to attend institutions of Higher Education. This course will discuss serving military students and the special challenges this poses. Starting with admissions we will look at the role of the ESO and how TA is set up. We will then go on to talk about military portals and some obstacles in attending colleges. We will look at the demographics of the military student, technological limitations, deployments and workload issues. We will view some studies of military students and show how these students can best succeed. This workshop is designed to help you improve your service to military students.

Objectives:
  • Learn issues facing universities entering the military market
  • Identify five key issues facing military students
  • Learn about about the role of ESOs and the complexity of TA
  • Learn the demographics and trends in military education
  • Identify which majors are most popular with military students
  • Build learning community by adopting effective practices of asynchronous discussion
Beginning Second Life 2/10 – 2/19  Bethany Bovard
New Mexico State University
Katie Fife-Schuster
The Sloan Consortium
Joanna Tong
The Sloan Consortium
Second Life is an extremely popular 3D virtual environment that has many applications for education, from increasing social interactions to deepening learning. In this workshop, you'll learn some of the basic Second Life skills that will help you successfully enjoy your second life. You'll also get a brief introduction to some of the educational possibilities of Second Life.

Objectives:
  • Acquire basic Second Life skills
  • Learn where to locate great Second Life resources
  • Explore educational possibilities of Second Life
Video & Audio Tools for Teaching & Learning 2/17 - 2/26 Bethany Bovard
New Mexico State University
Video and audio are powerful media for teaching and learning and can become irreplaceable assets to any distance course. With both video and audio you can present information, communicate with your students, and demonstrate course learning objectvies efficiently and effectively.

Objectives:
  • Explore five digital video and digital audio tools
  • Understand how both digital video and audio can enhance communication, teaching, and learning
  • Learn how to use video and audio effectively to improve engagement and learning outcomes

    To FULLY participate in this workshop, you will need a computer with microphone and speakers. We recommend a headset microphone in order to get the most satisfactory experience.
Using the Quality Matters Rubric to Improve Your Online Course 2/24 – 3/12  Ron Legon, Jean Runyon
Quality Matters
Recognizing quality is much like recognizing art; everybody sees something different. With regard to online courses, your students, faculty, administrators, peers, and accrediting bodies may not know what to look for in assessing quality. Defining quality standards proves crucial to successful course design and implementation.

Objectives:
  • Identify strategies to improve course(s)
  • Learn how to use the rubric tool developed by the nationally recognized, FIPSE-funded Quality Matters (QM) project
  • Affirm strong areas in course(s) and generate specific ideas for improvements
MARCH Dates Facilitators Description
Getting Started: First Step Toward Online Teaching (open workshop & pre-requisite for the Online Teaching Certificate
3/3 - 3/19   Sharon Taylor 
Colorado Community College System               
Getting Started: The First Step Toward Online Teaching is a prerequisite to the Sloan-C Certificate program. This workshop introduces potential faculty and/or administrators to online education fundamentals. You will not only discuss the concepts but use the technologies to gain practical "hands-on" experience.

Objectives:
  • Compare face to face and online teaching, including expectations, role adjustments, and course design
  • Apply the principles of effective participation through chat and discussion
  • Use synchronous and asynchronous technologies
  • Prepare for managing online classes, workload and resources
Fair Use and the Teach Act: A Closer Look 3/3 – 3/12 Linda Enghagen
University of Massachusetts - Amherst  
For those who already possess a basic understanding of copyright law, this workshop offers a closer look at the fair use defense and The TEACH Act. The workshop offers insight into how courts really evaluate the fair use factors when confronted with actual cases. In addition, the 9th Circuit's recent decision in Perfect 10 v. Amazon.com, Google.com et al will be discussed.

Objectives:
  • Review recent research on fair use decisions
  • Approach fair use analysis with the goal of advancing creativity
  • Learn about the implementation and impact of the TEACH Act
Using Community of Inquiry (Col) Survey for Multi-Level Institutional Evaluation 3/3 - 3/12 Phil Ice
American Public University System
The Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework developed by Garrison, Anderson and Archer (2000) provides a theoretical model of online learning processes that has been used by many scholars and practitioners in the field of online education. CoI is a constructivist process model, assuming effective online learning requires the development of community.

Objectives:
  • Develop an understanding of the three presences (teaching, social and cognitive) that interact to create the online learning experience
  • Learn how to interpret student satisfaction data obtained from administering the Community of Inquiry Framework survey
  • Learn how to use the Community of Inquiry Framework in the course development process, with an emphasis on the development of activities that foster the development of social learning
  • Engage in discussions related to assessing course effectiveness in terms of teaching, social and cognitive presence
  • Understand how Community of Inquiry Framework survey data can be used to asses the introduction of new technologies into courses
Podcasting in Higher Education: Current Trends and Applications 3/10 - 3/19 Burks Oakley
Ray Schroeder
University of Illinois at Springfield
Podcasting has had a revolutionary impact on formal and informal teaching and learning. Rising out of the advent of the Apple iPod, podcasts have grown into the mainstream of online media since early 2004. The power of the individual to use podcasts to communicate globally has important implications for educators.

Objectives:
  • Understand the impact of podcasting on teaching and learning
  • Explore how podcasting appeals to students and colleagues
  • Learn how to incorporate podcasting into teaching
Blended Learning: HyFlex Course Design 3/17 - 3/26 Brian Beatty
San Fransisco State University
HyFlex represents an approach to creating and managing blended courses that provides students even greater choices when trying to manage their time. Hyflex, (Hybrid/Flexible), allows a student to choose whether they will attend a face-to-face class, or complete the required work online for any particular class date. Hybrid – combines both online and face-to-face teaching and learning activities. Flexible – students may choose whether or not to attend face-to-face sessions … with no “learning deficit”.

Objectives:
  • Structure and deliver in a Hyflex environment
  • Present the course effectively (and professionally)
  • Engage learners with generative learning activities
  • Use authentic assessment to evaluate student learning
Intermediate Second Life 3/17 - 3/26 Mike DeMers
New Mexico State University
This workshop will introduce intermediate users of Second Life to various teaching tools useful to educators. This workshop is for the practitioner who is interested in developing skills to support pedagogy.

Objectives:
  • Understand how Second Life is being used for educational purposes
  • Visit exemplar Second Life educator sites
  • Learn about effective teaching practices in Second Life
  • Learn some introductory Second Life skills for teaching and managing classes
Using Moodle to
Create Online
Courses
3/24 - 4/2 Deborah Antoine
University of Illinois at Springfield
Kathleen Ives
The Sloan Consortium
Jonathan Small
The Sloan Consortium
Moodle is an open source web-based learning management system and a low cost alternative for educators to create vibrant online content.  The development of the Moodle platform was guided by a social constructionist framework of education which assumes that the knowledge a student receives is produced by the groups to which he or she belongs, or by particular discourse agreements. Moodle tools have an emphasis on:  group work, collaboration, communication, sharing, activities, and critical reflection.
Objectives:
  • Develop a working knowledge of Moodle as a learning management system
  • Learn specific Moodle features (user profile, navigation, browsers and settings, participants, discussion forums, Internal mail, assignment drop box, grades, groups, chat, wiki, blog)
  • Create course content using Moodle
  • Become prepared to create a full course site
Great Web 2.0 Tools
to Improve Learning
3/24 - 4/2 Bethany Bovard
New Mexico State University
There are many excellent Web 2.0 tools that have been used successfully to enhance learning and increase engagement, but finding just the right tools can be challenging. You will be introduced to five exemplar tools. You will learn how to effectively use these tools.

Objectives:
  • Explore several classes of Web 2.0 technologies
  • Understand how to enhance interactions in distance courses with Web 2.0 tools
  • Learn how to use Web 2.0 tools effectively to improve engagement and learning outcomes
APRIL Dates Facilitator Description
Advanced Techniques with Podcasting for Educators
4/7 - 4/16 Burks Oakley
Ray Schroeder

University of Illinois at Springfield
Many educators know a couple, some practice three or four, but this unique workshop experience reveals practical tips to making podcasting a dominant force in the online classroom. The facilitators walk through podcasting essentials and establish pedagogical linkages. Content is tightly focused on engaging the online learner and the workshop is designed to be interactive in nature.

Objectives:
  • Explore podcasting essentials
  • Learn about pedagogical linkages for podcasting
  • Understand how podcasting can impact learning and engagement
Advanced Second Life 4/7 – 4/16 Cathy Arreguin
San Diego State University
This workshop advances the skills of intermediate users (who have taken the level 2 workshop or its equivalent) to develop Second Life pedagogy, to design environments, and manage tools.

Objectives:
  • Develop Second Life skills to support pedagogy
  • Become well-versed in: seating areas, display panels, voice/text sessions, session recording, groups (creation, messaging, management), basic building, basic texturing (importing and using graphics), basic interactions (modifying easy scripts for instructional use)
Retention Strategies
in Online Education
4/7 - 4/16 Marie Fetzner
Monroe Community College
Ruth Bennett
Western Carolina University
The topic of retention continues to gain interest across the fields of higher education. Online student retention rates can be significantly lower than on-campus equivalents. With record numbers of students studying online, it is imperative that academic institutions discover why online learners have a significantly lower rate of persistence than on-campus students and understand how to improve success rates.

Objectives:
  • Learn strategies for making retention an institution-wide priority
  • Become versed in instructional design strategies for learning effectiveness and engagement
  • Identify support systems that enhance student satisfaction and faculty satisfaction
  • From the perspectives of the Sloan-C Pillars, learn how institutions and individuals create cultures for student success
Accommodating
Students with Disabilities:
Leveraging the
Online Learning Environment
4/7 - 4/13 Jane Jarrow
Disability Compliance in Career and Online Learning (DCCOL)
Traditional institutions of higher education that have made significant commitments to newly-constituted online programs need to understand how existing disability services unit can absorb the need for serving online students with disabilities. They need to know the legal mandates that obligate them to provide support to online students with disabilities and to understand how to fulfill the obligation to serve this often ignored population.

Objectives:
  • Develop an understanding of accommodations for ensuring complete access and full participation in the educational process
  • Become sensitive to non-visible or hidden disabilities
  • Follow effective teaching practices that will benefit all students
  • Develop alternative activities that achieve the same learning outcomes for all
  • Leverage technological alternatives to help disabled students
Delivering Content, Fostering Student Interactivity, and Assessing Learning in Blended Courses 4/12 - 5/3 Alan Aycock, Tanya Joosten, Robert Kaleta, Amy Mangrich, Matt Russell
Univeristy of Wisconsin Milwaukee
Effective blended teaching requires significant rethinking and design. When designed effectively, blended courses can improve learning and offer more effective use of available resources. Additionally, the blended modality provides for less passive learning and more active learning.

Objectives:
  • Use a design protocol to choose appropriate types of content delivery
  • Review alternative models of blended course redesign with special reference to large enrollment courses
  • Advance student interactivity by organizing a small group assignment which integrates face-to-face and online learning
  • Be introduced to methods of assessment consistent with special features of blended learning, and develop a course assessment plan
Getting Started: First
Step Toward Online Teaching (open workshop & pre-requisite for the Online Teaching Certificate)
4/21 – 5/7 Sharon Taylor
Colorado Community College System
Getting Started: The First Step Toward Online Teaching is a prerequisite to the Sloan-C Certificate program. This workshop introduces potential faculty and/or administrators to online education fundamentals. You will not only discuss the concepts but use the technologies to gain practical "hands-on" experience.

Objectives:
  • Compare face to face and online teaching, including expectations, role adjustments, and course design
  • Apply the principles of effective participation through chat and discussion
  • Use synchronous and asynchronous technologies
  • Prepare for managing online classes, workload and resources
Workload Management Strategies for Online Educators 4/21 - 4/30 Shari McCurdy-Smith
University of Illinois at Springfield
Kathleen Ives
The Sloan Consortium
Online teaching can redefine faculty members' teaching schedules. While the advantages for participating in online education include flexibility; the reality of the 24/7 classroom can prove daunting due to the investment in curriculum development and planning as well as the need to be responsive to student inquiries. This workshop offers strategies enabling online educators to manage time demands while teaching online courses.

Objectives:
  • Learn teaching strategies to improve effectiveness
  • Learn how to prioritize administrative tasks
  • Develop an appropriate combination of delivery models: direct, indirect, and collaborative
Web Accessibility for Online Learning: A How-To Guide for Creating Accessible Content 4/21 - 4/30 Marc Thompson
University of Illinois
Norm Coombs
Equal Access to Software & Information
Hadi Rangin
University of Illinois
Universal design seeks to make online learning available and accessible for all types of learners. Universal design is not a template approach to instructional design; rather, the philosophy emphasizes learning objectives need to be flexible to meet diverse needs. Online faculty often find themselves overwhelmed or too busy with their day-to-day responsibilities to fully appreciate and integrate the various tools that can be used to make learning equitable, flexible, and adaptable.

Objectives:
  • Develop an understanding of their institution’s learning management platform and how they can develop and integrate content following the principles of universal design
  • Receive an introduction to assistive technology and how it is utilized by individuals who are visually-impaired
Online Teaching Certificate Foundation Course
4/21 - 6/25
(Note: 9 weeks)
Julia Parra
New Mexico State University
The Sloan-C Certificate prepares faculty to teach and improve online courses using the Sloan-C pillars of quality in online education--learning effectiveness, scale, faculty and student satisfaction, and access.  Each candidate studies with a mentor and a small cohort of peers during the foundation course, a nine-week sequence of activities that include:
  • Using technologies for building your individual online teaching portfolio
  • Consulting with your mentor to develop a learning plan that matches your context and portfolio goal
  • Developing your course and receiving incremental feedback on it from peers and mentors
  • Applying quality metrics
  • Preparing to use new insights from elective workshops, peers and mentor
MAY Dates Facilitator Description
Online Learning: Making the Institutional
Business Case
5/5 – 5/14 Stephen Laster
Harvard Business School
Online and blended learning have flourished over the past decade.  Many faculty and students now crave this mode of teaching and learning, and across the educational landscape world class pedagogies, courses and programs have been created.  This workshop explores how we move from informal and grassroots approaches, which fueled the adoption of online and blended learning, to an institutionally sponsored and supported paradigm.

Objectives:
  • Identify the forces that are driving demand for and growth in online and blended programs
  • Consider barriers, resistance and preconceptions that exist within institutions
  • Understand the architecture of institution-wide implementation
Staying Organized, Evaluating Course
Design, and Moving Forward w/
Your Blended Course

5/10 – 5/30 Alan Aycock, Tanya Joosten, Robert Kaleta,
Amy Mangrich, Matt Russell 

University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
Effective blended course design should remain simple, keeping course goals in mind. Faculty should integrate the various course components, develop templates and rubrics. Contingency plans should also be developed.

Objectives:
  • Identify strategies to help students, to stay organized themselves, and to manage workload
  • Use a comprehensive blended learning checklist to evaluate course redesign process before, during, and after the initial course offering
  • Use the blended learning checklist to produce a course redesign plan to guide them during the remainder of the process
  • Produce a draft syllabus for critique and further development
Using the Quality Matters Rubric to Improve Your Online Course       5/12 - 5/28  Ron Legon
Jean Runyon

Quality Matters
Recognizing quality is much like recognizing art; everybody sees something different. With regard to online courses, your students, faculty, administrators, peers, and accrediting bodies may not know what to look for in assessing quality. Defining quality standards proves crucial to successful course design and implementation.

Objectives:
  • Identify strategies to improve course(s)
  • Learn how to use the rubric tool developed by the nationally recognized, FIPSE-funded Quality Matters (QM) project
  • Affirm strong areas in course(s) and generate specific ideas for improvements
Copyright Compliance for Online Educators 5/19 – 5/28 Linda Enghagen 
University of Massachusetts - Amherst
Online educators need to understand personal liability for copyright infringement when using materials to supplement an online course. Copyright owners have sued and will continue to sue individuals. You also need to know how your original works can be protected. Publishers and the academic community have established a set of educational fair use guidelines to provide standards and protection for educators.

Objectives:
  • Learn six rules for course design
  • Be familiar with fair use guidelines for public domain resources
  • Be able to share and protect original work that is published online
Technology Bootcamp 5/19 - 6/4 Bethany Bovard
New Mexico State University
The Sloan-C International Symposium on Emerging Technology Applications for Online Learning is designed to bring together individuals interested in the technological aspects of online learning. Experts, intermediate users and novices are welcome to participate in Symposium activities that will include face-to-face and virtual components. This event will be held in Summer of 2010 in San Francisco, California. This online workshop will get attendees up-to-speed on technologies being used at the conference (non-conference attendees are welcome to participate).

Objectives:
  • Learn Web 2.0 applications: posting to a wiki, creating a blog, using Twitter, using audio and video, podcasts and video blogs
  • Create and use VoiceThread as a means for instruction
  • Use Elluminate as a participant and moderator
JUNE Dates Facilitator Description
Getting Started: First Step Toward Online Teaching (open workshop & pre-requisite for the Online Teaching Certificate) 6/2 - 6/18  Sharon Taylor
Colorado Community College System
Getting Started: The First Step Toward Online Teaching is a prerequisite to the Sloan-C Certificate program. This workshop introduces potential faculty and/or administrators to online education fundamentals. You will not only discuss the concepts but use the technologies to gain practical "hands-on" experience.

Objectives:
  • Compare face to face and online teaching, including expectations, role adjustments, and course design
  • Apply the principles of effective participation through chat and discussion
  • Use synchronous and asynchronous technologies
  • Prepare for managing online classes, workload and resources
Selection,
Incorporation, and Assessment of New
and Emerging
Technologies for
Online Courses
6/16 - 6/25 Phil Ice
American Public University System
With the rapid evolution of new technologies, instructional designers, instructors and administrators are confronted with difficult choices related to implementation. Specifically, there is a lack of well defined standards for evaluating the efficacy of new technologies in online learning environments.

Objectives:
  • Learn frameworks for evaluating application of new and emerging technologies based on Sloan-C pillars
  • Explore how to assess beta-testing of new technologies
Blended Learning: HyFlex Course Design 6/16 - 6/25 Brian Beatty
San Fransisco State University
Hyflex represents an approach to creating and managing blended courses that provides students even greater choices when trying to manage their time. Hyflex, (Hybrid/Flexible), allows a student to choose whether they will attend a face-to-face class, or complete the required work online for any particular class date. Hybrid – combines both online and face-to-face teaching and learning activities. Flexible – students may choose whether or not to attend face-to-face sessions … with no “learning deficit”.

Objectives:
  • Structure and deliver in a Hyflex environment
  • Present the course effectively (and professionally)
  • Engage learners with generative learning activities
  • Use authentic assessment to evaluate student learning
JULY Dates Facilitator Description
Designing Blended Courses and Building
a Blended Learning Community
7/5 - 7/26   Alan Aycock, Tanya Joosten, Robert Kaleta,
Amy Mangrich, Matt Russell

Univeristy of Wisconsin Milwaukee
A significant amount of learning has been moved online making it possible to reduce the amount of time spent in class. Blended courses attempt to combine the best elements of traditional face-to-face instruction with the best aspects of distance education. Faculty can teach in new ways and students are more accountable for own learning.

Objectives:
  • Reconceive your traditional face-to-face courses for blended teaching and learning
  • Follow backwards design principles to design a course module
  • Build learning community by adopting effective practices for asynchronous discussion
  • Learn techniques for integrating face-to-face and online work, and apply them to your own courses
Video & Audio Tools for Teaching & Learning 7/7 – 7/16 Bethany Bovard
New Mexico State University
Video and audio are powerful media for teaching and learning and can become irreplaceable assets to any distance course. With both video and audio you can present information, communicate with your students, and demonstrate course learning objectvies efficiently and effectively.
From threaded voice discussions to podcasting, audio has many applications for your distance course. Audio tools will not only deepen the sense of teacher and student presence in your course, they can also enhance the learning experience. This workshop explores five easy-to-use audio tools that can add some spice and help you build a more robust learning community. You will also have an opportunity to explore and discuss research on educational uses of audio.

Objectives:
  • Explore 5 digital video and digital audio tools
  • Understand how both digital video and audio can enhance communication, teaching, and learning
  • Learn how to use video and audio effectively to improve engagement and learning outcomes
    To FULLY participate in this workshop, you will need a computer with microphone and speakers. We recommend a headset microphone in order to get the most satisfactory experience.
Fair Use and the
Teach Act: A Closer Look
7/14 - 7/23  Linda Enghagen
University of Massachusetts - Amherst   
For those who already possess a basic understanding of copyright law, this workshop offers a closer look at the fair use defense and The TEACH Act. The workshop offers insight into how courts really evaluate the fair use factors when confronted with actual cases. In addition, the 9th Circuit's recent decision in Perfect 10 v. Amazon.com, Google.com et al will be discussed.

Objectives:
  • Review recent research on fair use decisions
  • Approach fair use analysis with the goal of advancing creativity
  • Learn about the implementation and impact of the TEACH Act
Avoiding Faculty Burnout 7/14 – 7/23 Shari McCurdy-Smith
University of Illinois at Springfield
Kathleen Ives
The Sloan Consortium
As more institutions are offering ongoing degree programs online, faculty burnout increasingly is a concern for faculty, administrators, and instructional designers. Online faculty tend to spend more time preparing and teaching their courses as compared to onground faculty. For faculty, this translates into more grading, a 24/7 access mentality, excessive amounts of computer time, as well as more people pulling and grabbing for faculty time and attention. This workshop will explore the issue of academic management in online learning and ways to ensure that faculty can incorporate online teaching into normal academic life. In addition to learning skills to avoid burnout that derives from multiple sources, participants will be encouraged to share their own institutional practices as part of the conversation.

Objectives:
  • Identify strategies for better time management for online teaching
  • Understand exemplary techniques for administrating large online student groups
  • Learn what teaching practices are working for online professors at other institutions
Academic Integrity
in Online Education
7/28 - 8/6 Lori McNabb
University of Texas System TeleCampus
Melissa Olt
Strayer University Online
The role of technology in academic dishonesty is in the news, and federal legislation is pending that will require authentication of online learners. This session will provide information, examples, and a reality check for staff and faculty working in online education.

Objectives:
  • Explore why and how students cheat
  • Review faculty beliefs regarding cheating and online education
  • Review tools and techniques to deter and detect cheating and plagiarism
  • Understand a three-pronged approach to addressing academic integrity: policing (catching and punishing cheaters), prevention (designing courses and assignments that discourage cheating), and virtue (creating learning communities in which students do not want to cheat).
Getting Started:
First Step Toward Online Teaching (open workshop & pre-requisite for the Online Teaching Certificate)
7/14 – 7/30     Sharon Taylor
Colorado Community College System
Getting Started: The First Step Toward Online Teaching is a prerequisite to the Sloan-C Certificate program. This workshop introduces potential faculty and/or administrators to online education fundamentals. You will not only discuss the concepts but use the technologies to gain practical "hands-on" experience.

Objectives:
  • Compare face to face and online teaching, including expectations, role adjustments, and course design
  • Apply the principles of effective participation through chat and discussion
  • Use synchronous and asynchronous technologies
  • Prepare for managing online classes, workload and resources
Using Moodle to Create Online Courses
7/26 - 8/6 Deborah Antoine University of Illinois at Springfield
Kathleen Ives
The Sloan Consortium
Jonathan Small
The Sloan Consortium
Moodle is an open source web-based learning management system and a low cost alternative for educators to create vibrant online content.  The development of the Moodle platform was guided by a social constructionist framework of education which assumes that the knowledge a student receives is produced by the groups to which he or she belongs, or by particular discourse agreements. Moodle tools have an emphasis on:  group work, collaboration, communication, sharing, activities, and critical reflection.

Objectives:
  • Develop a working knowledge of Moodle as a learning management system
  • Learn specific Moodle features (user profile, navigation, browsers and settings, participants, discussion forums, Internal mail, assignment drop box, grades, groups, chat, wiki, blog)
  • Create course content using Moodle
  • Become prepared to create a full course site
AUGUST Dates Facilitator Description
Delivering Content, Fostering Student Interactivity, and
Assessing Learning
in Blended Courses
8/2 - 8/23 Alan Aycock, Tanya Joosten, Robert Kaleta,
Amy Mangrich, Matt Russell

University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
Effective blended teaching requires significant rethinking and design. When designed effectively, blended courses can improve learning and offer more effective use of available resources. Additionally, the blended modality provides for less passive learning and more active learning.

Objectives:
  • Use a design protocol to choose appropriate types of content delivery
  • Review alternative models of blended course redesign with special reference to large enrollment courses
  • Advance student interactivity by organizing a small group assignment which integrates face-to-face and online learning
  • Be introduced to methods of assessment consistent with special features of blended learning, and develop a course assessment plan
Using Community of Inquiry (CoI) Survey for Multi-Level Institutional Evaluation 8/25 - 9/3 Phil Ice
American Public University System
The Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework developed by Garrison, Anderson and Archer (2000) provides a theoretical model of online learning processes that has been used by many scholars and practitioners in the field of online education. CoI is a constructivist process model, assuming effective online learning requires the development of community.

Objectives:
  • Develop an understanding of the three presences (teaching, social and cognitive) that interact to create the online learning experience
  • Learn how to interpret student satisfaction data obtained from administering the Community of Inquiry Framework survey
  • Learn how to use the Community of Inquiry Framework in the course development process, with an emphasis on the development of activities that foster the development of social learning
  • Engage in discussions related to assessing course effectiveness in terms of teaching, social and cognitive presence
  • Understand how Community of Inquiry Framework survey data can be used to asses the introduction of new technologies into courses
Getting Started: First Step Toward Online Teaching (open
workshop & pre-requisite for the Online Teaching Certificate)
8/25 - 9/10 Sharon Taylor
Colorado Community College System
Getting Started: The First Step Toward Online Teaching is a prerequisite to the Sloan-C Certificate program. This workshop introduces potential faculty and/or administrators to online education fundamentals. You will not only discuss the concepts but use the technologies to gain practical "hands-on" experience.

Objectives:
  • Compare face to face and online teaching, including expectations, role adjustments, and course design
  • Apply the principles of effective participation through chat and discussion
  • Use synchronous and asynchronous technologies
  • Prepare for managing online classes, workload and resources
SEPTEMBER Dates Facilitator Description
Online Teaching Certificate Foundation Course
9/8 - 11/12
(Note: 9 weeks)
Julia Parra
New Mexico State University
The Sloan-C Certificate prepares faculty to teach and improve online courses using the Sloan-C pillars of quality in online education--learning effectiveness, scale, faculty and student satisfaction, and access.  Each candidate studies with a mentor and a small cohort of peers during the foundation course, a nine-week sequence of activities that include:
  • Using technologies for building your individual online teaching portfolio
  • Consulting with your mentor to develop a learning plan that matches your context and portfolio goal
  • Developing your course and receiving incremental feedback on it from peers and mentors
  • Applying quality metrics
  • Preparing to use new insights from elective workshops, peers and mentor
Staying Organized, Evaluating Course Design, and Moving Forward w/
Your Blended
Course
9/13 - 10/4 Alan Aycock, Tanya Joosten, Robert Kaleta,
Amy Mangrich,
Matt Russell

University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
Effective blended course design should remain simple, keeping course goals in mind. Faculty should integrate the various course components, develop templates and rubrics. Contingency plans should also be developed.

Objectives:
  • Identify strategies to help students, to stay organized themselves, and to manage workload
  • Use a comprehensive blended learning checklist to evaluate course redesign process before, during, and after the initial course offering
  • Use the blended learning checklist to produce a course redesign plan to guide them during the remainder of the process
  • Produce a draft syllabus for critique and further development
Advanced Techniques with Podcasting for Educators
9/15 - 9/24 Burks Oakley
Ray Schroeder

University of Illinois at Springfield
Many educators know a couple, some practice three or four, but this unique workshop experience reveals practical tips to making podcasting a dominant force in the online classroom. The facilitators walk through podcasting essentials and establish pedagogical linkages. Content is tightly focused on engaging the online learner and the workshop is designed to be interactive in nature.

Objectives:
  • Explore podcasting essentials
  • Learn about pedagogical linkages for podcasting
  • Understand how podcasting can impact learning and engagement
Copyright
Compliance for
Online Educators
9/15 - 9/24 Linda Enghagen
University of Massachusetts - Amherst  
Online educators need to understand personal liability for copyright infringement when using materials to supplement an online course. Copyright owners have sued and will continue to sue individuals. You also need to know how your original works can be protected. Publishers and the academic community have established a set of educational fair use guidelines to provide standards and protection for educators.

Objectives:
  • Learn six rules for course design
  • Be familiar with fair use guidelines for public domain resources
  • Be able to share and protect original work that is published online
Workload
Management
Strategies for Online Educators
9/22 - 10/1 Shari McCurdy-Smith
University of Illinois at Springfield
Kathleen Ives
The Sloan Consortium
Online teaching can redefine faculty members' teaching schedules. While the advantages for participating in online education include flexibility; the reality of the 24/7 classroom can prove daunting due to the investment in curriculum development and planning as well as the need to be responsive to student inquiries. This workshop offers strategies enabling online educators to manage time demands while teaching online courses.

Objectives:
  • Learn teaching strategies to improve effectiveness
  • Learn how to prioritize administrative tasks
  • Develop an appropriate combination of delivery models: direct, indirect, and collaborative
Great Web 2.0 Tools
to Improve Learning
9/22 - 10/1 Bethany Bovard
New Mexico State University
There are many excellent Web 2.0 tools that have been used successfully to enhance learning and increase engagement, but finding just the right tools can be challenging. You will be introduced to five exemplar tools. You will learn how to effectively use these tools.

Objectives:
  • Explore several classes of Web 2.0 technologies
  • Understand how to enhance interactions in distance courses with Web 2.0 tools
  • Learn how to use Web 2.0 tools effectively to improve engagement and learning outcomes
Blended Learning: HyFlex Course Design 9/29 - 10/8 Brian Beatty
San Francisco State University
Hyflex represents an approach to creating and managing blended courses that provides students even greater choices when trying to manage their time. Hyflex, (Hybrid/Flexible), allows a student to choose whether they will attend a face-to-face class, or complete the required work online for any particular class date. Hybrid – combines both online and face-to-face teaching and learning activities. Flexible – students may choose whether or not to attend face-to-face sessions … with no “learning deficit”.

Objectives:
  • Structure and deliver in a Hyflex environment
  • Present the course effectively (and professionally)
  • Engage learners with generative learning activities
  • Use authentic assessment to evaluate student learning
OCTOBER Dates Facilitator Description
Using the Quality Matters Rubric to Improve Your Online Course 10/6 - 10/22 Ron Legon, Jean Runyon
Quality Matters
Recognizing quality is much like recognizing art; everybody sees something different. With regard to online courses, your students, faculty, administrators, peers, and accrediting bodies may not know what to look for in assessing quality. Defining quality standards proves crucial to successful course design and implementation.

Objectives:
  • Identify strategies to improve course(s)
  • Learn how to use the rubric tool developed by the nationally recognized, FIPSE-funded Quality Matters (QM) project
  • Affirm strong areas in course(s) and generate specific ideas for improvements
Retention Strategies
in Online Education
10/6 - 10/15 Marie Fetzner
Monroe Community College
Ruth Bennett
Western Carolina University
The topic of retention continues to gain interest across the fields of higher education. Online student retention rates can be significantly lower than on-campus equivalents. With record numbers of students studying online, it is imperative that academic institutions discover why online learners have a significantly lower rate of persistence than on-campus students and understand how to improve success rates.

Objectives:
  • Learn strategies for making retention an institution wide priority
  • Become versed in instructional design strategies for learning effectiveness and engagement
  • Identify support systems that enhance student satisfaction and faculty satisfaction
  • From the perspectives of the Sloan-C Pillars, learn how institutions and individuals create cultures for student success
Preparing Faculty for Blended Teaching
and Learning
10/13 - 10/22 Alan Aycock, Tanya Joosten, Robert Kaleta,
Amy Mangrich, Matt Russell

University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
Faculty developers and trainers prove integral in helping faculty redesign courses for blended teaching and learning. A well established and highly successful blended teaching and learning faculty development program is presented from the viewpoint of these faculty developers and trainers. Guidance regarding program structure, content, and activities as well as general tips and pointers for fostering a successful faculty development experience are highlighted.

Objectives:
  • Understand what is at stake in implementing faculty development programs for blended teaching
  • Observe a well established and highly successful blended teaching and learning faculty development program from the viewpoint of its faculty developers and trainers
  • Address challenges related to instituting a blended course faculty development program
  • Evaluate the steps to take in implementing these programs in your own contexts
Getting Started: First Step Toward Online Teaching (open workshop & pre-requisite for the Online Teaching Certificate) 10/13 - 10/29 Sharon Taylor 
Colorado Community College System      
Getting Started: The First Step Toward Online Teaching is a prerequisite to the Sloan-C Certificate program. This workshop introduces potential faculty and/or administrators to online education fundamentals. You will not only discuss the concepts but use the technologies to gain practical "hands-on" experience.

Objectives:
  • Compare face to face and online teaching, including expectations, role adjustments, and course design
  • Apply the principles of effective participation through chat and discussion
  • Use synchronous and asynchronous technologies
  • Prepare for managing online classes, workload and resources
Beginning Second Life 10/20 - 10/29 Bethany Bovard
New Mexico State University  
Katie Fife Schuster
The Sloan Consortium
Joanna Tong 
The Sloan Consortium   
Second Life is an extremely popular 3D virtual environment that has many applications for education, from increasing social interactions to deepening learning. In this workshop, you'll learn some of the basic Second Life skills that will help you successfully enjoy your second life. You'll also get a brief introduction to some of the educational possibilities of Second Life.

Objectives:
  • Acquire basic Second Life skills
  • Learn where to locate great Second Life resources
  • Explore educational possibilities of Second Life
Teaching & Learning with Online Labs: Developing Best Practices & Accomplishing Learning Objectives 10/20 - 10/29 Sharon Brewer
Bruno Cinel

Thompson Rivers University
Moving the lab online requires challenging the traditional science teaching practices, notions, and approaches used in science education today. It also involves redefining the best practices associated with these activities to accomplish learning objectives. As these practices develop, the online science environment will continue to provide interesting and engaging opportunities for the teaching of science. This workshop explores the laboratory learning experience in an online environment.

Objectives:
  • Explore the use of remote instrumentation and virtual labs in an online learning environment.
  • Learn about best practices in online science education including defining learning objectives, assessing student learning and evaluating the effectiveness of the instructional intervention.
  • Discuss how to enhance the online learning environment and where it fits in current science education.
NOVEMBER Dates Facilitator Description
Getting Started:
First Step Toward Online Teaching
(open workshop & pre-requisite for the Online Teaching Certificate)
11/3 - 1//19 Sharon Taylor 
Colorado Community College System
Getting Started: The First Step Toward Online Teaching is a prerequisite to the Sloan-C Certificate program. This workshop introduces potential faculty and/or administrators to online education fundamentals. You will not only discuss the concepts but use the technologies to gain practical "hands-on" experience.

Objectives:
  • Compare face to face and online teaching, including expectations, role adjustments, and course design
  • Apply the principles of effective participation through chat and discussion
  • Use synchronous and asynchronous technologies
  • Prepare for managing online classes, workload and resources
Fair Use and the Teach Act: A Closer Look 11/3 - 11/12 Linda Enghagen
University of Massachusetts, Amherst  
For those who already possess a basic understanding of copyright law, this workshop offers a closer look at the fair use defense and The TEACH Act. The workshop offers insight into how courts really evaluate the fair use factors when confronted with actual cases. In addition, the 9th Circuit's recent decision in Perfect 10 v. Amazon.com, Google.com et al will be discussed.

Objectives:
  • Review recent research on fair use decisions
  • Approach fair use analysis with the goal of advancing creativity
  • Learn about the implementation and impact of the TEACH Act
Intermediate Second Life 11/10 - 11/19 Mike DeMers 
New Mexico State University
This workshop will introduce intermediate users of Second Life to various teaching tools useful to educators. This workshop is for the practitioner who is interested in developing skills to support pedagogy.

Objectives:
  • Understand how Second Life is being used for educational purposes
  • Visit exemplar Second Life educator sites
  • Learn about effective teaching practices in Second Life
  • Learn some introductory Second Life skills for teaching and managing classes
Using Moodle to Create Online Courses
11/10 - 11/19 Deborah Antoine
University of Illinois at Springfield
Kathleen Ives
The Sloan Consortium
Jonathan Small
The Sloan Consortium
Moodle is an open source web-based learning management system and a low cost alternative for educators to create vibrant online content.  The development of the Moodle platform was guided by a social constructionist framework of education which assumes that the knowledge a student receives is produced by the groups to which he or she belongs, or by particular discourse agreements. Moodle tools have an emphasis on:  group work, collaboration, communication, sharing, activities, and critical reflection.

Objectives:
  • Develop a working knowledge of Moodle as a learning management system
  • Learn specific Moodle features (user profile, navigation, browsers and settings, participants, discussion forums, Internal mail, assignment drop box, grades, groups, chat, wiki, blog)
  • Create course content using Moodle
  • Become prepared to create a full course site
DECEMBER Dates Facilitator Description
Advanced Second Life                 12/1 - 12/10 Cathy Arreguin
San Diego State University     
This workshop advances the skills of intermediate users (who have taken the level 2 workshop or its equivalent) to develop Second Life pedagogy, to design environments, and manage tools.

Objectives:
  • Develop Second Life skills to support pedagogy
  • Become well-versed in: seating areas, display panels, voice/text sessions, session recording, groups (creation, messaging, management), basic building, basic texturing (importing and using graphics), basic interactions (modifying easy scripts for instructional use)
Academic Integrity
in Online Education
12/1 - 12/10 Lori McNabb
University of Texas System TeleCampus
Melissa Olt
Strayer University Online
The role of technology in academic dishonesty is in the news, and federal legislation is pending that will require authentication of online learners. This session will provide information, examples, and a reality check for staff and faculty working in online education.

Objectives:
  • Explore why and how students cheat
  • Review faculty beliefs regarding cheating and online education
  • Review tools and techniques to deter and detect cheating and plagiarism
  • Understand a three-pronged approach to addressing academic integrity: policing (catching and punishing cheaters), prevention (designing courses and assignments that discourage cheating), and virtue (creating learning communities in which students do not want to cheat).