Conference Presentations
Competency-Based Education - How to Keep Students Interested with Mandated Curriculum
This session focused on courses where the curriculum is mandated, either by state licensing requirements, testing requirements, or industry standards. It can be difficult to keep learners interested when course material must be geared to a test or licensing requirement - but it can be done! Methods for keeping learners engaged, encouraging learning, and achieving the results that learners want are the focus of this session.
Competency-Based Education: Craze or Way Forward for Online Learning?
Competency-based education (CBE) is getting a lot of attention. Defined by personalized learning and "authentic" assessment, advocates position CBE as a powerful toolkit to address some of higher education's biggest challenges- namely, high tuition, low completion and vague/uneven student outcomes. It could be argued that these challenges are relevant for "traditional" online learning, too. Amid the hype, what is truly distinctive about the new generation of CBE programs, and is CBE really a mainstream solution or a more specialized one?
Competently Designed: Building Capacity to Support the Competency-Based Revolution
In the last eighteen months, the number of higher education institutions publicly committed to competency-based education (CBE) has risen from 24 to over 225. Undersecretary Ted Mitchell said, “CBE is...the single most promising set of innovations we have to make improvements against the challenges facing our education system today.” (Competency-Based Education Network convening July 22, 2014). The marked increase in interest and commitment to CBE presents significant challenges for instructional design professionals.
Compliance Contagion: Building Faculty Buy-In with Internal Auditing
Building buy-in from faculty during the course audit process is paramount for the successful improvement of an academic program. Traditional recommendations for successful audits include openness, with timely and relevant feedback, as well as clear expectations. An innovative, collaborative approach towards course auditing can incorporate these recommendations, and create an audit process that fosters success within an academic program. Using the acronym, BUY-IN, peer auditing practices can produce results that motivate and empower faculty to achieve QM Certification.
Connecting Course Design and the QM Rubric - Use a Guide!
This session will provide a Course Developer's Guide with information on applying best practice, a checklist, and basic templates for online course design following Quality Matters Standards in an easy-to-use format.
Connecting QM Program Certification and HLC Open Pathway Quality Initiative
Do you lead a QM initiative, the accreditation process, or oversee quality assurance at your institution? If you answered yes, this session could assist with tying all of these initiatives together in a way that saves time in the long run while maximizing the institutional reward.
Connecting Students -- Interacting through Online Activities
During this session, participants will review and develop course activities that allow students to actively engage with content and with each other. In addition, issues and strategies related to facilitation of student-to-student activities and group work will be presented and discussed.
Connecting the Dots to Create a Quality Map for Online Programs
As those of us well versed in QM know, the primary focus of the rubric is design. While quality design is an essential component of a quality online program, it is not the only component required to achieve overall quality assurance. Those of us who have taken the APPQMR would also recognize the pie image that is a trademark training piece of this workshop. While participants of the APPQMR are made aware of the fact that QM does not try to address all pieces of the pie, they are often hear about how the other pieces could be effectively addressed.
Content Engagement: 5 Simple Tricks to Engaging Online Video Lectures/Tutorials
Providing your online students with engaging video lectures is great. Yet, figuring out how to create engaging video lectures can be daunting, especially when you are not tech savvy. Come see some examples and learn about what simple tips you can do to make your online lectures interactive.
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!
Copyright and the TEACH Act: Using Audio, Video, and Images in Online Courses
This presentation covers the differences between Fair Use and the TEACH Act. Focusing on the benefits of the TEACH Act and then also the required aspects for usage and implementation.
Cornerstones of Quality
This is a 5 minute Quality Talk Presentation over an initiative to standardize departmental policies and practices as they relate to online education. The slides are mostly cut and pastes from our policy document.
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 Design Considerations for Inclusion and Representation
This enlightening session examines diverse, inclusive, and equitable online course design best practices and emphasizes how they can transform the learning experience for online learning communities. Delve into a variety of strategies you can employ to create inclusive digital experiences for all!