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Wk 2-Instructional Design [Aug. 20, 2011, 5:05 p.m.]


As you think about your course, the first thing you'll need to do is to identify the content area, grade level, and specific content objectives. You'll also need to think about how students will use it (when, how, what will it take the place of, etc.).

Then think about a syllabus or outline for your course. Depending on your course, this might include a pacing guide or it might be more flexibly self-paced. Regardless of the format, you'll need to think about instructional design, content, assessment, and student engagement.

Of course, you'll also need to identify the platform in which you'll host your materials. For this course, you may develop in any platform. Your choices may include (but are certainly not limited to):

  • Any online learning platform your school uses
  • Moodle (either hosted at your school, on a 3rd party site such as one of these, or at K12 Open Ed, providing that you will not need accounts for children under 13, which we are not equipped for)
  • Blackboard (either hosted at your school, on a 3rd party site like CourseSites)
  • P2PU (again providing that you will not need accounts for children under 13)
  • A wiki (free, hosted options could include Wikispaces or PBWorks.)

hands on work iconPost a brief description of the class (and subset of learning materials) you are focusing on building for this course. (Again, you may do this on your own blog and post a link here if you prefer.) Include the target audience, your specific learning goals, and the platform you will use, as well as any additional thoughts you have on instructional design at this point.

Quality

What makes a good online or blended course?

Whether online or blended, some of the characteristics of high quality courses are that they:

  • can be used anywhere and anytime
  • allow students to guide their own learning through options and differentiated learning opportunities
  • are more student-centered, less focused on content transmission, and more interactive than traditional classrooms
  • allow students a high degree of interactivity with the teacher and other students
  • include formative and summative assessment
     

Here is a rubric that can be used to evaluate online courses:

SREB's "Standards for Quality Online Courses" (Southeast Regional Board of Educationl; ___; pdf)

hands on work iconHow do your own ideas about quality map to the rubric shown aboved? What is included in this rubric that you had not considered before?

Use the rubric iteratively as you develop your own course materials and refine them accordingly.

 

Instructional design

 

Additional resources