Bloom's Sixth


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This seems a perfect message for a world of shut-ins. It may very well have been created before the Covid-19 mess, but I came across it only about 10 days ago. The window is on the east side of Chalmers Hall, and it is visible only from a distance. No doubt it was created by a “Star Trek” fan. It refers to a constant refrain of the Borg, a collective of machine-enhanced beings who traverse the galaxy, conquer at will and announce: “Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.” If the corona virus could speak, it might say something much like that. So we resist in whatever way we can.…
Read Moreabout Making iPad videos, using VoiceThread, and living a life of non sequiturs
Posted on by Doug Ward

With apologies to the late Warren Zevon, isolation is hardly splendid – at least when it is forced upon us. I wrote last week about ways to create structure and belonging for students in online classes. Later in this post, you will find some information about student mental health, which was shaky even before the forced isolation. Data…
Read Moreabout A place for community during isolation from campus
Posted on by Doug Ward

It’s the little things we miss when our routines change. This isn’t the working whistle. It’s the one on display in the Kansas Union. As classes move online, those little things will add up for faculty, staff and students. We won’t bump into colleagues along Jayhawk Boulevard. There will be no chalking on sidewalks on Wescoe Beach, no sound of the fountain on West Campus Drive, no view of the Campanile over Potter Lake, no smell of books in the stacks at Watson Library, no view of the flags atop Fraser Hall. We can …
Read Moreabout To give your online class a bit of campus feel, add a virtual whistle
Posted on by Doug Ward

One aspect of online teaching that I feared would make it less enjoyable for me as an instructor is that my students and I wouldn’t get to know one another as well as we do in our in-person courses. I thought that it would be difficult to replicate the interaction and dynamic atmosphere of a classroom where we all exchange ideas, participate in thoughtful discussions, challenge each other’s beliefs and positions, develop an understanding of and respect for one another, and come to care about each other as fellow humans. As I have developed new courses and adjusted and redesigned old…
Read Moreabout Creating community in an online course
Posted on by Doug Ward

This is what teaching online looks like. That’s not quite right. This is what planning for teaching online looks like after a week and a weekend of long days and an early meeting on Monday morning. About noon, I looked down and realized I was wearing mismatched boots. Some people wear mismatched socks. I wear mismatched boots. Rather than hide them, I showed them to everyone I met on what was probably the last day of in-person meetings for quite some time. I emailed the photo to colleagues and to my students. Everyone needed the laugh. “We’re not really laughing at you,” Diana Koslowsky…
Read Moreabout When you teach online, nobody laughs at your boots
Posted on by Doug Ward

Take a deep breath. You are about to launch into an online adventure. Yes, I know, you didn’t want to take this trip. The corona virus – and the university – made you do it. Like it or not, though, we are all on the same trip, one that will take us deep into the uncharted territory of a quickly deployed online teaching and learning matrix of enormous scale. This involves not just the University of Kansas, but hundreds of colleges and…
Read Moreabout You can complain or you can model. Which will your students see?
Posted on by Doug Ward

Three students in an upper-level physics class designed and built a tabletop lightboard for their final project this semester. Lightboards are used in creating online videos for classes. They allow instructors to write on a glass pane as they would a whiteboard. A camera is positioned facing the instructor, capturing the writing on the glass as the instructor speaks. The image must then be flipped so that the writing can be read in the video. The approach is especially popular among STEM instructors. John Rinnert of KU IT inspects the lightboard created by Conner Brown and other students…
Read Moreabout A new tool for creating online learning material
Posted on by Doug Ward

Among academics, online education inspires about as much enthusiasm as a raft sale on a cruise ship. That’s unfortunate, given that higher education’s cruise ship has a hull full of leaks and has been taking on water for years. The latest evidence of academic disdain for online education comes from the Online Report Card, which is sponsored by the Online Learning Consortium and other organizations (There was a link, but the page does not exist anymore), and has been published yearly since 2003. It is based on surveys conducted by Babson Survey Research Group in Fall 2015. In that…
Read Moreabout Statistics about online education point to a persistent problem
Posted on by Doug Ward

By Doug Ward Women teach a sizable majority of online courses at KU, even though men make up a sizable majority of the university’s faculty. Data provided by Laura Diede, the associate director at the Center for Online and Distance Learning, shows that of 171 online courses that CODL worked with in the 2014-15 school year, 60 percent were taught by women. That’s especially interesting when you consider that of 1,649 faculty members on the Lawrence campus that fiscal year, 
Read Moreabout Women teach a majority of KU’s online courses
Posted on by Doug Ward

James Burns of Boston College uses a term I hadn’t heard before: “swirling students.” Writing in The Evolllution, Burns says swirling students are those who move in and out of college, collecting a few hours here, a few hours there as they move toward a degree. They often have full-time or part-time jobs, families, health problems or financial challenges, he says. Photo by Doug Ward The best way to attract – and keep – those students is through personal attention,…
Read Moreabout Education Matters: ‘Swirling’ students and online communication
Posted on by Doug Ward