Conference Presentations

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First Order: Respecting and Rescuing the Resistant

For many faculty members, the very thought of teaching online raises alarms and defenses. However, even in seated classes in today's world, we can all benefit from learning and instituting the principals of quality online course design. A team consisting of a Director of Online Learning and two faculty members will lead this fun discussion that will help rescue and respect faculty prone to resist. This session is aimed at anyone who can have an impact on faculty members in higher education.

Five Colleges, One Mission: Performance Excellence in Quality Assurance for Online Student Success!

Alamo Colleges Online has undertaken significant efforts to ensure quality in online course design. This proposal highlights our initiatives over the past four years, including faculty training, course certifications, district policy updates and enhancements, and the implementation of AI technology to enhance efficiency. Attendees will learn about our strategies, the importance of faculty engagement, and the innovative use of AI to scale our quality assurance processes.

Flexible but not Flimsy: Addressing Standards Using a Personalized Faculty Pathway

This session will present the WeTeach program, a model proven to be successful to engage faculty in a voluntary program supporting course design and integrating QM Standards. The program includes a flexible model with multiple delivery methods that address faculty's needs with personalized custom attention. This session will showcase the program's structure, project management tools and strategies, campus communication and promotion, and a brief overview of content topics.

Flexible Trends in Education: Is the New QM Rubric Limber Enough?

Does the new QM Rubric go far enough to address emerging competency-based, customized, flexible models in higher education? We will use as a case study courses that were previously QM-Certified that have recently been converted to one institution's new flexible model of delivery directly assessing competencies. We will assess possible application of the new QM Rubric to this new model as well as to other higher education models and explore the implications for the continuing evolution of the Rubric.

Flipping the Classroom

The concept of the flipped classroom has been a hot topic in education in the last few years.   While some institutions have fully embraced this style of learning, others have good intentions but may not know how and where to start when it comes to actually implementing this approach.  Beginning in Fall 2014, a fully flipped classroom was implemented in a senior level medical-surgical nursing course.  This presentation will discuss the implementation process, student feedback, and student outcomes in the course.

Flipping the Lens of F2F to Effective Online Design: A Journey to a Social Justice QM Certification

Are you new to QM? Do you teach content that promotes impactful student conversations but are unsure how to design online meaningful engagement that you have with your f2f courses? We answered yes to these questions and then asked ourselves, "Can we use QM to make this part of the course better?”We faced some challenges, but here we are... QM certified and ready to share our experiences about promoting participant engagement in conversations about complex social topics.

Forging New Paths Toward Increased Retention with the QM Rubric

Retention is a hot topic in online courses, where Patterson and McFadden (2009) found dropout rates to be up to 6-7 times higher than the same on-campus programs. However, the QM Rubric can be used to design courses that can lead toward better retention and success of online learners. This session will review some of the literature about online retention and the QM Specific Standards that can help to keep students engaged.

Forging New Paths with QM-Infused Faculty Training

Most campuses have a faculty training or development program, and some may even have a set curriculum for that program. However, they may consider Quality Matters to be a portion of the curriculum all to itself. We have found that embedding the ideals and best practices that Quality Matters embodies?from the underlying principles to the Rubric-- into every training or faculty development event can help to promote the program's effectiveness much more than having QM be a stand-alone initiative.

Fostering Student Engagement

 “Fostering Student Engagement” Are you growing weary of text-heavy content inside online courses? If so, this session is for you!

The goal of this session is to share strategies used by the North Carolina Virtual Public School that capture the attention of students and support learning activities. Learning objects can be used to help your online course meet and exceed QM Standard 6.2.

Framework that Supports a QM Culture

This session reviews how one institution's existing organizational structure is leveraged to coordinate QM resources. No one person can do this work in isolation. It requires collaboration and consultation across campus and academic units. This session will illustrate a QM framework with three divisions: administration, training and development, and implementation. The framework identifies overlap between divisions, striving to improve student learning and success, and, most importantly, allowing faculty to make decisions regarding QM implementation.

Fresh Ideas With Accessibility Baked-In

Join us for a café conversation about baking in accessibility into your fresh course ideas. (Thursday, Nov. 1 10:10am) 

These ideas are informed by disability laws, access guidelines, and the strategies used to develop an accessible MOOC with the lessons AMAC Accessibility has learned.

A truly accessible course for the widest range of learners is created by baking-in accessibility for people with disabilities.