Conference Presentations

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Conversations to Connections to Community

What is the QM Community? How can we benefit from it? How can we get involved? Come learn from a group of faculty, instructional designers, administrators, Peer and Master Reviewers, and QM Coordinators who watched as simple conversations resulted in established connections to create the QM Community. Listen to stories about how each of us became a part of the QM Community. Brainstorm with us about how to join the conversation, get connected, and continue blazing new trails in the QM Community.

Panel Discussion with Audience Participation

Cooking up Quality Feedback in Online Instruction

Building rapport and providing descriptive feedback to learners is championed by Quality Matters. Learners are more likely to persist and succeed when they can not only hear but also take in and feel motivated to apply the feedback they receive from instructors. We welcome you to the table for collaborative conversation and interactive practice. Join us as we share key strategies you can season to fit your learning environment!

Copyright and Creative Commons: How to Find the "Free" Stuff!

Learn how copyright works within institutions of higher education, the implications of Teach Act for online courses, and get an understanding of how Creative Commons licensing allows designers and others to use images, video, audio, and software in online courses, increasing quality while maintaining cost-effectiveness! This session will briefly cover copyright, and then show a plethora of free tools and technologies for use in online courses.

Course Building 101: One Module at a Time

Consistency in course design is paramount. A simple way to achieve this is through a course-building template that incorporates QM standards. The course template provides consistency for students as they navigate an online program. It also allows students to focus on content rather than navigation and will assist with persistence and retention rates. This session will explore a template that guides instructors/instructional designers in building a course using the "Course Building: One Module at a Time!" model course.

Course Design - It's a Dirty Job, but Somebody's Got to Do It

There are many things that both faculty and instructional designers do that help improve the quality of course design. In this session, we will investigate those hidden tasks and discuss how both faculty and instructional designers can work together.

Learning Objectives: After this session, participants will be able to . . .

Document the various tasks that are related to designing a course.

Evaluate the possible interactions between faculty and instructional designers to design a course.

Course Review Manager's Toolbox

Looking for ideas to streamline communication, increase productivity and save time? Come and take a peek inside this course review manager’s “toolbox” to see what tips, tools and strategies are used to organize and manage data, deadlines, and reviewers during each busy review cycle. By using templates, free web tools, and automation, it is possible to streamline data management tasks and processes. Not just for course review managers, this session will be of interest to anyone looking for ideas, tools and techniques that will save time and increase productivity.

Course Review Snafus: Turning Issues into Solutions

Even with detailed planning, things can go wrong. In this session, a panel that includes several experienced QM Course Review Managers will present a variety of challenges that have come up during and after course reviews, such as: - Problems with access to course materials - Issues within the review team - Challenges in communication The panelists will discuss how they resolved each snafu or put practices into place to avoid it in the future. Attendees will also have the opportunity to share their review experiences.

Crafting Online Course Standards while Maintaining Academic Freedom

How can institutions leverage technology to incorporate instructional design principles in every course with limited resources? One solution: templates. By now, templates are very commonplace but are often misunderstood. Course templates offer a unique, flexible, and sustainable way to ensure quality while keeping options open. Smaller institutions with limited staff can leverage an online course template to provide a baseline standard and teachable moment. Let's remove the anxiety of a blank course shell and take a deep dive into building templates in Canvas using Design Tools.

Create Your Pathway: Personalized Learning for Design and Arts

How can you meet the needs of undergrad and graduate students? What about students taking 1 credit vs. 6 credits? What if they come from five different colleges? What if they are all working on different projects throughout the course? These are the challenges we faced as we designed a way to meet all of those needs in an online course that will need to scale to over 4,000 students.

Create Your QM Vision Board! Dialog with Colleagues, Find Your Path to Scalable QM Adoption and QA

Learn how UMBC successfully addressed challenges faced during emergency remote teaching and developed a scalable solution for quality online course design based on the QM rubric. Analyze your institutional climate, identify stakeholders, and set goals to support QM adoption that is faculty-driven and student-centered. Our vision board revealed a pathway for faculty to learn how to apply the Rubric, utilize QM’s Concept of Alignment, and improve course accessibility and usability. 

Creating a Culture of Quality

What does it take to create a culture of quality? It’s much more than endorsing a set of quality assurance standards. Who are the people, and what are the supports, policies, processes, and facets of institutional culture that drive online course quality assurance implementation? In this session, we’ll share and examine the research gathered from a mixed-methods study. The approach employed included a survey about these facets of institutional QA implementation and optional follow-up interviews.