Staying online : a design for a sustainable community of practice for online instructors

The increasing demand for online and hybrid courses necessitates a corresponding increase in the number of higher education faculty members who offer instruction in these alternative delivery environments. Faculty members may resist course redesign due to concerns about increased workload and techno...

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Main Author: Anderson, Michael William
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-08-6181
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2012-08-61812015-09-20T17:12:25ZStaying online : a design for a sustainable community of practice for online instructorsAnderson, Michael WilliamOnlineHybridBlendedMotivationFaculty developmentThe increasing demand for online and hybrid courses necessitates a corresponding increase in the number of higher education faculty members who offer instruction in these alternative delivery environments. Faculty members may resist course redesign due to concerns about increased workload and technology and require extrinsic motivation in the form of financial compensation and pedagogical and technological support as well as intrinsic motivation in the form of informal peer recognition, and intellectual satisfaction. Online courses offer temporal flexibility and multiple transactional axes but may superficially appear to devalue interaction. The apparent deindividuation of computer-mediated communication may be overcome by group socialization in collaborative communities which are focused on authentic problems. This report proposes a design-based research approach to determine the impact from an online collaborative community on the number of online course offerings and whether or not a professional development workshop that models interaction for participants will have a corresponding impact on the degree of interactivity incorporated in the respective courses of those faculty members. The proposal outlines the creation of a workshop offered in a hybrid delivery mode which through iterative instructional design interventions may lead to the development of a community of passionate instructors who collaborate to solve the technical and pedagogical challenges of their respective content disciplines and thereby meet the demand for online course offerings.text2012-11-26T20:12:01Z2012-11-26T20:12:01Z2012-082012-11-26August 20122012-11-26T20:12:07Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-08-61812152/ETD-UT-2012-08-6181eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Online
Hybrid
Blended
Motivation
Faculty development
spellingShingle Online
Hybrid
Blended
Motivation
Faculty development
Anderson, Michael William
Staying online : a design for a sustainable community of practice for online instructors
description The increasing demand for online and hybrid courses necessitates a corresponding increase in the number of higher education faculty members who offer instruction in these alternative delivery environments. Faculty members may resist course redesign due to concerns about increased workload and technology and require extrinsic motivation in the form of financial compensation and pedagogical and technological support as well as intrinsic motivation in the form of informal peer recognition, and intellectual satisfaction. Online courses offer temporal flexibility and multiple transactional axes but may superficially appear to devalue interaction. The apparent deindividuation of computer-mediated communication may be overcome by group socialization in collaborative communities which are focused on authentic problems. This report proposes a design-based research approach to determine the impact from an online collaborative community on the number of online course offerings and whether or not a professional development workshop that models interaction for participants will have a corresponding impact on the degree of interactivity incorporated in the respective courses of those faculty members. The proposal outlines the creation of a workshop offered in a hybrid delivery mode which through iterative instructional design interventions may lead to the development of a community of passionate instructors who collaborate to solve the technical and pedagogical challenges of their respective content disciplines and thereby meet the demand for online course offerings. === text
author Anderson, Michael William
author_facet Anderson, Michael William
author_sort Anderson, Michael William
title Staying online : a design for a sustainable community of practice for online instructors
title_short Staying online : a design for a sustainable community of practice for online instructors
title_full Staying online : a design for a sustainable community of practice for online instructors
title_fullStr Staying online : a design for a sustainable community of practice for online instructors
title_full_unstemmed Staying online : a design for a sustainable community of practice for online instructors
title_sort staying online : a design for a sustainable community of practice for online instructors
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-08-6181
work_keys_str_mv AT andersonmichaelwilliam stayingonlineadesignforasustainablecommunityofpracticeforonlineinstructors
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