Assessment Redux, ED 653
I am completely aware that what I am doing for assessment in this training module is situation specific. In another workplace, tests and quizzes, might be appropriate. Likewise, a rubric similar to the example from Arizona, or even one more traditionally classroom shaped might be appropriate. The hard question is do I have the skills and the language to do that work too?
In response to Owen’s comment about the value of rubrics particularly for those performing at the lower end of the skill set, motivation and self-discipline. I understand in both the classroom and the workplace, since I have awarded failing grades and terminated employees. Additionally, I will be challenging my staff to do more with rubrics in relation to workplace performance. The obvious benefit is greater consistency in evaluation. However, an important and often understated benefit is getting unspoken expectations articulated. In a multi-generational, multi-cultural, and variable skill/experience workplace unspoken expectations are unfair and the cause of stress.
This segues into why I am emphasizing “learning logs” in this module. I am concurrently teaching the module on professional demeanor that I designed last semester. Using the forums as a “learning log” is working well in this situation. “Working well” means, employees are engaging with me and with each other and most of the feedback is gentle and cheerful. Admittedly some of the topical posting is answers that “I want to hear.” However, we have created a venue where we can have a conversation about the kind of workplace we want to create and inhabit and the student employees are part of that. Accordingly, their membership in the team is greater and their accountability is higher too. We evaluate their performance in the workplace. Sometimes that results in progressive discipline and ends in termination. Most frequently, it involves coaching for improvement and recognition of solid performances. Sometimes it results in encouragement to apply for supervisory openings.
We had some confusion and some resistance to participation in this training module from a handful of employees at the outset. I choose to handle it in the workplace and through the chain-of-command. I spoke with my library coordinators (the direct supervisors of the student staff). I asked about how they presented the training to these new hires? It was here that we encountered an ambiguity two had made very clear explanations of expectations; one had been vague and open-ended. That supervisor met in person with each employee and re-explained the expectations. She also encouraged them to talk with me directly. I have had three conversations. Time management has been a recurrent concern. One person expressed concern about discomfort with one of the assignments. I have learned several lessons: one is about cognitive load, second is about framing some flexibility into the assignments, third is about the students’ unfamiliarity with online learning environments. Two of my library coordinators were uncommitted, at the outset, to this form of training. This showed in their direct reports initial participation. However, as my staff has joined the conversation their misgivings have been allayed.
In this context approaching the conversation as “learning logs” is working. As I mentioned, I liked looking at the postings in terms of clarity, analysis, relevance, and self-reflection. However, I do not see the value of adding the matrix of low, medium and high quality at least in terms of individual postings in the online venue. I think each library coordinator is following along and is getting a sense of that for themselves and their direct reports. Training is one column in our employee evaluation and this adds information to that column, however, non-participation speaks more loudly, and will ultimately influence our decision to not rehire an employee.
Bob’s Project One and Info-graphic, version two, ED 653
5 thoughts on “Bob’s Project One”
Hi Bob,
this is a very nice attempt at creating a graphic. I like your use of colors. They work well for bringing attention to important elements of the content.
I do have couple of suggestions… Because your graphic is really hard to read and follow as you have too many font sizes and text going different directions I would maybe situate the text one direction and use a very light background of different colors to help differentiate between it. Another solution would be to make all text the same size, but use bold style to emphasize between important and not so important elements. Using numbers might help to bring a little bit of order as well.Here are some examples of different infographics that might help:
https://www.google.com/search?q=best+infographics&espv=2&biw=1300&bih=705&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=kifuVPTcBoryoASo64HYAg&sqi=2&ved=0CEIQ7Ak#tbm=isch&q=best+simple+infographics&revid=9864775650 likes
Hi Bob,
I’m with Tatiana on her suggestions. This is a bit visually daunting. The design elements create a bit of a barrier to my perception of your intended meaning rather than easing my approach. Specifically, I like the four tiles with the arrows and associated text. The red circle with a slash, however, is jarring. I’m not sure about an intended order or pathway through these ideas? I like each point, however. Each has meaning or significance, but some sort of organization or pathway leading us or helping us find an “entrance” would be of assistance, and/or helping us prioritize your points.
Visual design isn’t my strongest suit, so I understand where you’re coming from.
I’d suggest maybe freeing yourself from the software. Print each piece of text, or write them down, cut separately, and see if you can’t arrange in some sort of flow, even if there are multiple points of entry/egress… Play around with the images and ideas and see if a pattern emerges.
-Owen
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Thanks to both of you for suggestions. Thanks Owen for letting me leave the digital space, that actually is a very useful suggestion. Tatiana, I actually think this version sucks. It is too heavily dependent on text. However, the bind I’m struggling with is something I touched in thinking about Kim’s image. The switching between images and text creates a self-conscious switching and then interrogation. I rarely get through any examples of infographics because of the extensive work to make any sense out of them. I was trying unsuccessfully to limit that through staying with the text.
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Hi Bob,
Your content is fantastic. Not only good training content, but also a lot of good reminders! I thought a bit about how I would simplify the organization, but, design is a really personal process and its hard to make suggestions when there are thousands of directions you could go. Here’s just one idea… create four pull out boxes with corresponding colors from the four boxes in the central graphic. Then group the text into the box that it most exemplifies. Like with like and color coded to the main idea. Have fun!
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I second Kim’s comment that this is some great content. Very substantive.
Info-graphic, version two
March 2, 2015
4 thoughts on “Info-graphic, version two”
Hi Bob,
The source you sited, Susan Cain and The Power of Introverts caught my eye (because the redesign allowed for things to catch you eye!) so I went and looked her up. I listened to her TED talk…and LOVED it. Introvert as opposed to extrovert is a fundamental core difference in how people approach the world, and so often causes hard feelings and misunderstandings. She is beautifully eloquent on the topic and I just added her book to my summer reading list. Truth be told, I might not be able to wait:) Thanks!
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PS love the redoux.
I would suggest you skip the top section. Your actual topic starts with the headline Develop Your EQ Today and the cute lead in adds cuteness but draws attention away from the power of the meat of your graphic.
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Much better! I really like this, Bob.
I like the content at the top, the horrible bosses and beatings will continue (I’ve always liked that meme? Is that what one calls it?). I like what you’re going for – contrast. Maybe your design concept would be best served by a contrasting infographic? A whole piece centered around poor EQ practices, and poor management? That might be really fun to make, and read, and would open wide the door for your (now) strong piece on EQ. …
Good work!
-Owen0 likes
You guys…. This is, for me, a complete joke. I have situated online gaming memes next to each other, the PvP pirate, and the rainbows and ponies of Carebears. I’m making light of the medium and of the topic (PvP pirates drink the tears of their Carebear victims — hardly in touch with their EQ).
Owen’s suggestion to break the two into contrasting info-graphics is a good one. Creating the “horrible boss” one would be fun and probably such an exercise would force me to take the topic more seriously. Or, more probably I would be bad and find ways to burlesque the medium and topic even more with all the additional room.
I have a new co-worker, she is a young librarian, and this is her first job with her new credentials. She is working on becoming our Social Science and Data expert. I stopped by her office the other day and she gave me a tour. One stop was her bulletin board decorated with info-graphics about data. I mentioned my struggle with image/text congruence how easily I get distracted by in-congruence. She just laughed at me. She pointed to one of the images which had a row of icons across the bottom, purely decorative.
I think for me to make a good info-graphic is going to require a lot of work. First, is content. Second, is summarizing. Third, is making associations between images and ideas. Images that do real work. And I do think source citation has a place in a legit info-graphic. I don’t know… the irony is that to get good at it I would have to practice.
Bob’s Assessment, ED 653
The performance I really need to assess occurs in the workplace, at the service desk, in employees various interactions. Wiggins and McTighe define “authentic performances” in six ways:
- Is realistically contextualized….
- Requires judgment and innovation….
- Asks the student to “do” the subject….
- Replicates key challenging situations in which adults are truly “tested” in the workplace, in civic life and in personal life….
- Assesses the student’s ability to efficiently and effectively use a repertoire of knowledge and skill to negotiate complex and multistage tasks….
- Allows appropriate opportunities to rehearse, practice, consult resources, and get feedback on and refine performances and products. (Wiggins, 2006)
My quick and dirty assessment is that I have addressed the first four elements. My first draft falls down in two places concerning the last two elements. Both my learning outcomes and my journal assignments need revision with these elements in mind. A profound difference in this context is that my instruction is blended/flipped into the workplace. I am assessing their performance for continued employment and possible promotion. Turning to the work I need them to do because of this training, I identified these five performances:
- use of effective listening skills in conversations with customers, employees and supervisors.
- service interactions will be higher quality and more efficient.
- increased confidence in their performance.
- navigate difficult conversations successfully.
- choosing to have difficult conversations more frequently.
I chose to emphasize learning journals for two reasons, one selfish and one pragmatic. The selfish reason first, a graduate school mentor, before the advent of online instruction used learning journals, alas; his life was cut short by cancer. I want to experiment with journals, in part, in his remembrance. But, some of the best demonstration of learning comes out of the tradition of journals, the Lewis and Clark expedition, Darwin’s, Voyage of the Beagle, and a personal favorite, The Log from the Sea of Cortez. My pragmatic reason is that I do not want the work in the online environment to over shadow the work at the service desk rather I want it to support it. If I get into required essays, or quizzes, I have slipped back into schooling for the sake of schooling. In fact, something I need to help these young people to keep at a distance. They are excellent at schooling. They are not so good at real life. So, returning to my assignment:
Let us think of the forums as our journals. Journal entries do three kinds of work: first they record what we have seen and heard in the training videos, (slides, bullet points, interesting turns of phrase, ideas we encounter for the first time), then, second we turn to reflecting, we record our reactions, feelings, judgments, and learning, third we engage in analyses:
- What was really going on?
- What sense can you make of the training video?
- Can you integrate theory into the workplace experience/online training?
- Can you demonstrate an improved awareness and self-development because of the training and our work in the forums?
Unlike our private journals, this is a shared journal. As such, we have responsibility and accountability to each other. We need to be both courteous and hardheaded. If we simply pitch each other softballs, our learning will be limited. If we are rude to each other, no one will participate.
A quick and dirty literature review shows that a lot of the scholarship around learning logs was done in the mid-1980s through the early 1990s. A lull occurs until the early 2000s (Babcock, 2007; Hurst, 2005). The most recent articles however are not exploring the use of this tool in the online context, forums and blogs. I think these mediums are ready-made sites for these teacher-student/student-teacher, and peer-to-peer interactions. Returning to Wiggins and McTighe I am reminded to ask about the evidence I need to confirm learning.
- What specific characteristics in student responses, products, or performances should we examine to determine the extent to which the desired results were achieved?
- Does the proposed evidence enable us to infer a student’s knowledge, skill, or understanding? (Wiggins, 2006)
Because this journal is shared in real time, it is possible to engage in formative assessment rather than depend on summative assessment for proof of learning. At any time, we can step out of the conversation to ask about the conversation hence one important aspect of assessment. I can look for key words, or synonyms, “explain, interpret, apply, express perspectives, empathize, and self-knowledge” in their journaling and commenting.
As I have said elsewhere, I really care most about what employees do at the service desk. Accordingly, the rubric I want to work on is focused on the workplace not the journal. We have created documents, over the years to help us do our work, training checklists, and performance evaluation forms. Like many workplace documents, they are organic and local. The notion of workplace rubrics inspired me to do a little Googling – see what other people are doing. I stumbled on the Arizona Workplace Employability Skills Project (Arizona Department of Education in partnership with the University of Arizona and Corporate Education Consulting, 2012) which is simply a great resource for the task. This is their rubric in an outline.
However, Owen’s point is that we practice writing rubrics. Right now, I am content with the two elements of core communication so provisionally I will let them stand. “Sensitive to diversity” is a serious hot button in both the workplace and in higher education. We have not really grappled with serious and focused training — we give protected classes and harassment a salute. We have not treated it as a core skill (mental note we have work to do here). The technology piece is in many ways assumed (mental note we have work to do here). We do talk about privacy laws. We talk around the matter of brand integrity. Therefore, I have a lot of work to do both in terms of refining training but in defining this rubric. Alas, the actual evidence for relative competence offered in the Arizona report is of limited use hence why I leave it out of my summary. So yes, this is feeling overwhelming. Our authors say, “If the thought of using so many rubric traits seems overwhelming, start small. Go back to the two basic criteria – quality of the understandings and the quality of the performance. Add a third for process when appropriate, and other rubric traits as time and interest permit”(Wiggins, 2006).
I need to refine the technology criteria of this core skill set. We use a telephones (voice and text), email, and Google calendar, one of my Library Coordinators uses Facebook as well, in our communication strategy. Therefore, I will rephrase the criteria being specific “Exercises competence in using telephone, email, Google calendar, or Facebook for work place communication.” I will rephrase the brand integrity criteria to say, “Represents the library in a positive manner.” Regarding laws, I offer this formulation “Abides by privacy laws and library policy protecting customer information.” The criteria “Matches technology to content” reminds me of matching affect appropriately to the situation (laughing when someone is crying as a negative example). Perhaps, I can do a parallel formation one in the core workplace skills and one in the technology section. These are heavy on performance and light on evidence of understanding. Through posing “why” questions I may better formulate both my learning outcomes and facilitate the employee’s attempts to offer evidence of understanding along with practical performances.
Full stop, I am worried about using rubrics in the workplace because of misplaced concreteness and misplaced emphasis. I do not want student employees chasing points on assignments I want them chasing excellence in a real world performance in all of its ambiguity. The right answer in service situation does not exist once and for all. Rather it is negotiated repeatedly instance by instance. Yet I sense the value and merit of rubrics for supervisors in having a touchstone, a standard for evaluation even as we negotiate this best possible version of Colby College libraries.
I think that I like the Arizona rubric in the context of a student employee’s workplace performance. I like the 4 stages of progression, novice to leader. However, in the context of blended/flipped online instruction supporting workplace performance, and my emphasis on learning logs, I prefer the rubric that Tatiana offers: clarity, analysis, relevance, and self-reflection. I mentioned in an earlier post that I am teaching the precursor material at the same time I am developing this unit. What I am seeing in that is almost a hunger among the student employees for this kind of interaction. One where I and my library coordinators’ engage with them on the topics and coach them on these necessary life skills. The engagement and self-reflection is extraordinary and I am right to be cautious about developing a rubric for grading in this instance. I get that I need to learn more about writing rubrics, but, that is a different situation.
Arizona Department of Education in partnership with the University of Arizona and Corporate Education Consulting, I. C. (2012). Arizona Workplace Employability Skills Project: Rubric Development Workplace Employability Skills Project Phase II. Arizona.
References
Babcock, M. J. (2007). Learning Logs in Introductory Literature Courses. Teaching in Higher Education, 12(4), 10. doi: 10.1080/13562510701415615
Hurst, B. (2005). My Journy with Learning Logs. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 49(1), 4. doi: 10.1598
Wiggins, G., and McTighe, J. (2006) Understanding by Design (2nd ed.). New Jersey: Pearson: Merrill Prentice Hall.
Communication, ED 653
Original Post
Right now, I am imagining a section that precedes this that focuses on “Taking the Step up….” I expect this communication section to take about a month. I am still toying with what to follow this section with – right now, I am thinking of shifting to very pragmatic elements of supervision, delegation, for one example.
Third enduring understanding: Communication, communication, communication getting it all done depends upon excellence in communication in all forms.
Communication (core)
- Effective and extensive listening skills
- Emotional intelligence
- Crucial conversation (the ability to say the truth and maintain trust and respect)
Learning Outcomes
- explain the five listening skill sets (recall details, understanding the big picture, evaluate content, notice subtle cues, empathize) and name your strongest and weakest skill set.
- interpret the communication situation and demonstrate several techniques for clarifying your role in that situation.
- list the effective listening behaviors and interpret situations offer reasons for selecting a strategy apply it appropriately in the situation.
- explain what emotional intelligence is. Explain why developing emotional intelligence at work is important. Discuss strategies for cultivating emotional intelligence in the workplace.
- demonstrate self-knowledge through the four steps detailed in the instructional video: self-knowledge, interpreting feelings, accurate self-perception, and cultivating self-esteem.
- extend that self-knowledge into skills focused on self-regulation. Interpret the self-regulation techniques: triggers, personal integrity, goal setting, and flexibility and agility, as they are directly relevant and important in your experience working the service desk.
- shift perspectives and empathize with others through the five skills for creating emotional awareness: building relations, empathy, anticipating needs, social awareness, and appreciating diversity.
- apply this knowledge to the workplace, and to your knew role as supervisor: training, facilitating teamwork, managing conflict, leading for and through change, becoming influential and being an inspirational leader.
Learning Resources (Attn: ED 635 students I have written this for my target audience. However, if you access Lynda.com through the UAF Library your student login will give you access to these trainings, assuming they spark your interest. I really recommend the Leading with Applied Improv.)
Go to this url http://web.colby.edu/acits/lyndacampus/, and follow the instructions on logging in. Once you have access view the video training listed below. It is fine to do this during your regular but quiet shift (please just remember to leave one earbud out so that you can still hear the phone, or face-to-face customer questions).
Listening is a critical competency, whether you are interviewing for your first job or leading a Fortune 500 company. Surprisingly, relatively few of us have ever had any formal training in how to listen effectively. In this course, communications experts Tatiana Kolovou and Brenda Bailey-Hughes show how to assess your current listening skills, understand the challenges to effective listening (such as distractions!), and develop behaviors that will allow you to become a better listener—and a better colleague, mentor, and friend.
Leading with Emotional Intelligence
Emotions are all around us in the office, and it is important for leaders to understand how to harness them to cultivate productivity and positive relationships. In this course, lynda.com director of learning and development Britt Andreatta shows how to develop emotional intelligence to better lead teams, work with peers, and manage up. Learn what emotional intelligence is and how it factors in at work and discover concrete techniques for raising your own emotional quotient (EQ). This includes perceiving yourself accurately, exercising emotional self-control, practicing resilience, and developing empathy. Then turn those lessons around to build your awareness of others and learn to inspire helpful communication and manage conflict.
We will be viewing these two instructional sessions together. This is to create a foundation of thought and skills on the topic of communication. They allow us to compare and contrast the instruction by the various presenters as well – that is we interpret between the two and make our own sense of the topic.
- View Emotional Intelligence, Introduction, and section one and two, Understanding Emotional Intelligence, Developing Self-Awareness, and View Effective Listening, welcome and section one, Assessing your Listening Skills
- View Emotional Intelligence, section three, developing Self-Regulation, View Effective Listening, section two, Challenges to Listening
- View Effective Listening, section three, Effective Listening Behaviors, and Conclusion, and View Emotional Intelligence, sections four and five, Building Awareness of Others, and Building Relationships
Let us think of the forums as our journals. Journal entries do three kinds of work: first they record what we have seen and heard in the training videos, (slides, bullet points, interesting turns of phrase, ideas we encounter for the first time), then we turn to reflecting we record our reactions, feelings, judgments, and learning, third we analyses:
- What was really going on?
- What sense can you make of the training video?
- Can you integrate theory into the work place experience/online training?
- Can you demonstrate an improved awareness and self-development because of the training and our work in the forums?
Unlike our private journals, this is a shared journal. As such, we have responsibility and accountability to each other. We need to be both courteous and hardheaded. If we simply pitch each other softballs, our learning will be limited. If we are rude to each other, no one will participate.
I want you to practice the skills your are learning about with customers as you help them transact business. I also want you to use them with co-workers and direct reports. Keep notes on these interactions and report in the forums on your experiences. Finally, as you interact with outside businesses (grocery store, clothing, liquor, and restaurants for examples) apply the communications skills again keep notes on these interactions and report to the forums on your observations.
Assignment three takes us in a slightly different direction. Accordingly, we will adjust the work a little to match the different content. This section is about attuning ourselves to others. Seeing how they struggle to communicate and seeing their emotional stumbles or equally possible we can observe their excellence and intelligence with communication. So, again list and record what you learn from the training, but now shift your attention to observing co-workers as they interact with customers and each other and reflect on how skillful or inept their communication is. The point here is not to judge but to observe and to begin to plan for helping them improve. This is the rudiments of job assessment and an important aspect of a supervisor’s role. Record both good and weak performance (out of courtesy do not report the person’s name) and report to the forums on performance and suggestions for improvement. Together we will analyze these examples you provide.
Learning Resources (Attn: ED 635 I am considering pairing the Emotional Intelligence and the Leading with Applied Improve and leaving the Effective Listening, first and Having Difficult Conversations, last as stand-alone bookends on the unit. Any thoughts on that alternate structure?)
We will be viewing these two instructional sessions together. Their content is less directly related to each other though there are points of overlap. However, both connect well to the previous two trainings we watched and so watch for that.
Having Difficult Conversations
Leadership coach and lynda.com director of learning and development Britt Andreatta shares her tips and strategies for having difficult conversations. In her four-phase model, you will discover the situations that lead up to difficult conversations, decide when the conversation is warranted, prepare for the interaction, and monitor outcomes to ensure success. Along the way, learn the secrets of turning difficult conversations into successful interactions that enhance communication and rapport. Improve both your professional and personal relationships, finding your way back from conflict through mutually successful outcomes.
Improv theater was designed to help actors solve problems on stage. In this course, facilitator, coach, and former stand-up comedian Izzy Gesell demonstrates how to use the skills, practices, and mindset of improv to develop critical leadership qualities of presence, acceptance, and trust. Izzy shares some games you can play with your team members or coworkers to “practice spontaneity” and incorporate the improv mindset into your everyday life.
Learning Outcomes
- explain what constitutes a difficult conversation.
- interpret communication situations in terms of the matrix of difficulty. Diagnose and anticipate when conversations go badly. Explain the four phases of successful conversations.
- apply the instruction in the emotional intelligence training to understanding the “buildup phase” in a workplace situation leading to a difficult conversation. Compare and contrast what was said in these two trainings.
- explain the eight techniques listed in the section on reflection leading up to the difficult conversation. Based on the previous training you will recognize both knowledge and skills, and strengths and weakness you saw in yourself apply both the tools and the self-knowledge to these eight techniques
- strategize approaches to difficult conversations.
- apply the nine techniques for difficult conversations in practice scenarios.
- explain why the follow-through phase is as important as the conversation itself. You will describe developing an action plan and how and why acknowledging efforts to change has importance in this phase.
- recognize and explain what to do if the intervention is not working.
- explain the critical leadership qualities: presence, acceptance and trust.
- list and describe the games to practice improvisation
- apply the several reflections and principals of leadership in the video to your broader life experience, work, school, family, etc.
- reflect on yourself and what you need to do to become the leader you would follow
Assignments
- View the welcome, section one and two, Understanding Difficult Conversations, The Buildup Phase of the Having Difficult Conversations training. View the Introduction, and sections one and two, How Applied Improve (AI) Works, and Applying AI to Leadership/
- View section three, The Reflection Phase, in the Having Difficult Conversations training.
- View section four, the Conversation Phase, in the Having Difficult Conversations training. View section three, Improve in Practice of the Leading with Applied Improv training video.
- View section five and the Conclusion, of the Having Difficult Conversations training video. Finally view, sections 4 and the conclusion of Leading with Applied Improv training.
As in the previous set of assignments, some of the work here is to learn new material. Accordingly, we are looking for recording, a list, a set of bullet points, which identifies skills, tips, and techniques that you learned from the training videos. We are looking for you to explain insights and to ask questions as well. However, beyond that we are looking for you to make associations with the first two videos and to select, interpret and apply among the tools these four training videos offer. Thirdly, we are asking you to interrupt you existing patterns of communication, or to venture beyond what your existing comfort zone is and to do that you will have to practice these skills regularly. So, first try these skills out in your interactions with customers, dorm mates, professors in the classroom, parents. Obviously celebrate your successes, more difficult consider sharing your failures. Through peer review and coaching on these forums and our face-to-face sessions, you have amazing resources available to improve your communication skills please take advantage of this opportunity.
Short-lived befuddlement, instead, perhaps… ED 653
So much for deadlines.
The young people who work for me are traditional college age students 18-21. Many come from preparatory schools, though not all. The libraries actually do a good job of recruiting students of color, and international students. The international students are perhaps as privileged as our majority students are. Frequently they are recruited from programs like UWC International. Some of our international students are at Colby, in part, on a “can pay” basis. Meaning they are paying entirely out of pocket. A few of our students come from working class backgrounds. One might presume that such a talent pool should make hiring easy. Alas, excellence in academics and sports does not necessarily translate to a good work ethic or an appropriate professional demeanor. Frequently their work experience is very limited sometimes constrained to summer camp staff or even volunteer work. All of that aside we are talking about some very intelligent, focused and hardworking young people. Out of this pool, we train and develop student employees. Moreover, from those we train we recruit student supervisors. We require that student supervisor’s interview with our entire permanent staff, five of us, and one aspect of their interview is to come prepared to teach us something. I have learned to make peanut butter sandwiches, various origami… things, how to play Angry Birds, and one person taught us to triple jump, as a sampler.
Wait, the UPS driver just called. “How is your driveway?” “You might not want to come up.” “Can you meet me in 10 minutes?” “I’ll be there.” So, now I have to ask you all to hold that thought while I go read Chapter Six…. Hmmm, hmmm, hmmm, ok, I am back.
And, I have to say that our authors may be good teachers, good instructional designers, but they are not good philosophers. They are making the notion of “understanding” do too much work; as best I can see “understanding” is every step in and the whole of cognition. I will whine about this more in the forums and here instead focus on the work Owen requires. First, “create a brainstorm.” Then sort that crap out:
- Worth being familiar with (wbfw)
- Important to know and do (Itkad)
- Big ideas and core tasks (core)
Taking the Step up to Supervision
Awkward: (itkad, perhaps even core)
- supervising former co-workers (peers)
- supervising “Friends”
- supervising seasoned employees (people on the job longer than you)
- being accepted by your new peer group
- getting the supervision you need
- dealing with colleagues who applied for the position you got
- discomfort with being in the middle
Organization Mission and how promotion changes ones relation to it(core)
Core Leadership Theories (wbfw)
Leadership Styles (Itkad)
Communication (core)
- Effective and extensive listening skills
- Emotional intelligence
- Crucial conversation (the ability to say the truth and maintain trust and respect)
- Coaching
Project Management/Delegation (itkad)
- When
- Who
- How
- Control
Management (wbfw)
- Accounting
- Finance
- Operations
- Product development and delivery
- Technology
So, this is the rough shape of the brainstorm. This is just pulling crap out of my head. I am sure I have forgotten important stuff. I am equally sure that I need to put meat on these bones.
First enduring understanding: If my expectations are unclear, the employee’s performance will be vague as well. Corollary to that, doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results is simply stupid.
I think this is important to me as leader. It keeps me honest when I assess employee performance. It keeps me honest as well when I am not getting the performance I want from employees. Perhaps I need to ask for, train, role model, coach in a different way to achieve different results.
Second enduring understanding: leadership is what we do with people, including ourselves. Management is what we do with money and stuff (glibly speaking for librarians, books, for example). Both are important and both require different, perhaps unrelated knowledge and skills, even talent.
I think it is hard to be excellent at both sets of skills. In a purely subjective universe, I prefer leadership skills at optimum levels and management skills at good levels. I believe that is true currently. I wonder about it in the future as we replace people with technology here I am thinking about Amazon’s web site replacing cashiers and customer service personal, and their robotic retrieval system replacing warehouse staff, for one example.
Third enduring understanding: Communication, communication, communication getting it all done depends upon excellence in communication in all forms.
This is hard to learn. It is hard to be a good writer, it is hard to be a good speaker, it is hard to paint or draw well, and I know nothing about music, or dance. Yet I can see every day that when I get it right(and that is tentative, fleeting and subjective) the work gets easier.
Now because I find our authors to be confusing on “understanding” I am going to have to circle back to the final element of this assignment. “Once you’ve created a list of content priorities and identified the big ideas, the next step is to craft the wording for your “Enduring Understandings.” In pursuit of this goal, read Chapter 6 in the Understanding by Design text.” I am looking forward to a lively conversation in the forums because I think we have to get a much clearer grasp of what we mean by this if we are going to make it central to our instructional design.
Owen, are we heading in the direction you hoped for this assignment?
Eureka: discovery of a topic, ED 653
In our coursework for last terms Online Pedagogy class I discovered the following article. It gelled the whole project selection process for me in an instant.
See, A. & Teetor, T. S., (2014) Effective e-Training: Using a Course Management System and e-Learning Tools to Train Library Employees, Journal of Access Services, 11:2, 66-90, DOI: 10.1080/15367967.2014.896217, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15367967.2014.896217
Between our three libraries, we operate with a crew of seventy student employees across the several service desks. Our challenge is to turn teenagers into service professionals quickly and consistently. We focus intently on their training and have developed over the years a toolkit of techniques and resources for the task. We have flirted with using the college’s learning management system (lms) in this case Moodle for five or six years and yet never made the commitment. The three links below trace the development of a Moodle unit. I will be piloting the unit this spring. We have selected new hires for the JanPlan and spring terms as well returning employees who we are grooming, potentially for supervisory roles, to participate.
https://ed655-fall2014.community.uaf.edu/2014/10/09/article-review-5-bob-heath/
https://ed655-fall2014.community.uaf.edu/2014/11/07/professional-demeanor-training-unit/
https://ed655-fall2014.community.uaf.edu/2014/12/03/final-project-rational-and-method-bob/
Owen, however has clearly managed expectations when he writes, this:
If you’re enrolled in the M.Ed. program, you may eventually take—or have taken—the Online Pedagogy course. That course and this one are complementary. The culminating project in the Online Pedagogy course is a unit-sized curriculum plan. The culminating project in this course is a complete online learning module. In both courses, you will be writing learning objectives. In adherence to UAF’s student code of conduct, you may not turn in the same assignment(s) for both courses. You may submit work on similar subject matter as long as the product is substantively distinct. For example, you might work on two separate learning modules for the same subject. These would have distinct learning objectives, assessments, and activities. Contact me if you have questions about how to integrate assignments in the two courses.
So, obviously I will be creating an altogether new project though I will be working in the same arena. Last term I proposed three potential modules settling in the end on the Professional Demeanor unit described above. The other two, were Emergency Procedures, and Photocopiers/Printers. In truth I wish I had the experience of teaching the unit on demeanor in hand already. That experience would help with evaluating these topics. Nonetheless, I am still pleased to be teaching and developing at the same time since I believe a virtuous cycle can be accomplished in that practice.
One of the key conclusions in the article above is that online education has a place in this work/training environment but that it like the flipped/blended classroom has to be accompanied by face-to-face training and coaching (these are two distinct tasks in developing employees). As we all know perfect teaching/training does not necessarily equate to perfect performance. This is in part because there is a difference between knowledge and skills. Therefore, in the workplace, rehearsal/practice and coaching build skills and because we evaluate performance (changes in behavior) as indicating learning, we cannot rely entirely on online presentation. Accordingly, which of the topics lends themselves more to a blended and flipped environment? If I am limited to these two topics then Emergency Response is probably the more fertile ground.
Part of me is still holding out for a better topic for this course work….
I just had a flash of inspiration! A topic close to my heart is leadership and so a third potential is a unit focused on our student supervisors. This topic fits extremely well in the blended/flipped environment. We depend heavily on the student supervisors and yet much of their training is real world, pushed into the deep end — not the best, or most systematic learning.
So, there you go: Leadership/Management for new Supervisors.
Orientation, ED 653
Just running two weeks behind here Owen generously let me come and play. I work at Colby College in Maine. Have done so since 1991. I am in the application process to the ONID program. And, per my usual am taking the program backwards. However, if our text authors are right then this is actually good practice and my required core courses will be all the better (wink). I will not repeat what I offered in the forum. Rather I will keep this brief. Owen, I am late, behind on assignments, and you are about to turn on the content fire-hose — time for a big drink. Looking forward to learning from you all.
Online Pedagogy: Personal philosophy — Bob, ED 655
Often times we are significantly formed by negative role models – positively. I mean, that we define ourselves positively in opposition to bad, weak or shabby experiences. For me K-12 was a shabby, at best, series of experiences. Fortunately, college and then graduate school were valuable and positive experiences — that I attended was a stroke of luck as I had written the whole of formal education off. However, in being self-reflective of that disparity my early thinking about a philosophy of pedagogy was susceptible to radical theorists. So for example:
- Dennison, G. (1999). The Lives of Children: The Story of the First Street School: Heinemann.
- Foucault, M. (1995). Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison (2nd ed.): Vintage.
- Illich, I. (2000). Deschooling Society: Marion Boyars Publisher.
The physical site of schooling and the unnecessary connection between teaching and learning, or more explicitly the priority of teaching the sub-texts, order and discipline, over content and learner, are at the heart of these critiques. Moreover, in my early phase of theorizing about schooling, teaching and learning these were liberatory insights. I needed to swing to the extreme as a process of healing to correct my feelings of shabbiness. However, one cannot long operate at extremes. Gradually, additional thinkers softened and complicated these notions:
- Bateson, G. (1972b). Steps to an Ecology of Mind. New York: Ballantine Books.
- Schumacher, J. A. (1989). Human Posture: The Nature of Inquiry. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
- Wigginton, E. (1985). Sometimes a Shining Moment: The Foxfire Experience. Garden City, New York: Anchor Press/Doubleday.
All of these thinkers explore ways to be radical, thoughtful, and engaged in auditing their organization, even as they practiced their professions within that organization. Through these and my own positive experience in higher education, I could imagine myself a teacher in this venue. I even started a PhD program, ill-timed and so unfinished, I had to make my peace with earning a living to contribute to my family. This, although at the time like a door closing, was actually another fortuitous turn in my professional life. I started taking business and IT classes – a seeming radical turn from the libertarian, and philosophical leanings. Yet, in truth, communication and leadership were the skills and interests that developed in this turn – very practical applications of the theories leading up to this moment. In the latter part of those courses, I took some online classes and found a learning environment with which I resonated. The, architecture of the classroom was ruptured (no sitting in ranks and rows) and the tyranny of the clock, gone (I could spend hours on interesting material and minutes on uninteresting). Self-motivated learners were rewarded (or conversely the unmotivated weeded themselves out). Pace was personally dictated (faster, and more being my preferred approach). Interaction with other learners was by choice (at least far more than in the classroom). Professors who realized that they were not in control and so instead became facilitators and coaches supporting my learning. The timing is fortuitous for me as I see one more re-invention of my professional self, one more push before retirement. Tied to that is my laser like desire to return to Alaska, my time as an undergraduate in Sitka – well like a salmon returning to the river of origin – it has always been my horizon.
Online Pedagogy is a new enough set of concepts, to me, that I do not yet have a defined set of categories. Therefore, my vague set of categories: I am fascinated by learning communities, by augmented reality, and gaming (both a model for inquiry, and fun thing to do). In the specific context of Alaska, I see online learning as having a very important role in cultural preservation and transmission for Alaska Natives – it is a way to cross generations and locations. I am interested in alternative forms of certification, the high school diploma, the BA, MA, instead of standing on their own are part of a wider set of credentials informed in part by real life (parenting should damn well count for some credentialing). Another fascination aspect of online instruction is the creation of teams to do the work that used to be done by the “sage on the stage.”
Learning Communities:
I find the example of these provided by the surfer’s learning community described in earlier post to be deeply satisfying. I love it because it reminds me of the Temporary Autonomous Zones celebrated by Hakim Bey in the mid-80’s. A relapse to my anarchist roots, timely as we have just survived an episode of higher educations self- reflexive bitterness. For years I have subscribed to the mission of higher education only to be burned by the privilege of the tenured. And here we get to the heart of why I love the story about surfers’ learning communities in YouTube, along with a host of other specialized skills, none of the cost (financial and spiritual) and all of the benefits and we do it ourselves. I no longer buy, under questioned, the value of tenure track academics.
The TAZ is an encampment of guerilla ontologists: strike and run away. Keep moving the entire tribe, even if it’s only data in the Web. The TAZ must be capable of defense; but both the “strike” and the “defense” should, if possible, evade the violence of the State, which is no longer a meaningful violence. The strike is made at structures of control, essentially at ideas; the defense is “invisibility,” a martial art, and “invulnerability”–an “occult” art within the martial arts. The “nomadic war machine” conquers without being noticed and moves on before the map can be adjusted. As to the future–Only the autonomous can plan autonomy, organize for it, create it. It’s a bootstrap operation. The first step is somewhat akin to satori–the realization that the TAZ begins with a simple act of realization.
I love that our text for the course is so completely focused on learners and learning outcomes. It is not about being in need of teaching rather we share the need for learning and only rarely is teaching the way to fill that need. Indeed let me appropriate Bey’s musing:
The {learning} is an encampment of guerilla ontologists: strike and run away. Keep moving the entire tribe, even if it’s only data in the Web. The {learning} must be capable of defense; but both the “strike” and the “defense” should, if possible, evade the violence of the State, which is no longer a meaningful violence. The strike is made at structures of control, essentially at ideas; the defense is “invisibility,” a martial art, and “invulnerability”–an “occult” art within the martial arts. The “{learning}” conquers without being noticed and moves on before the map can be adjusted. As to the future–Only the autonomous can plan autonomy, organize for it, create it. {Learning} is a bootstrap operation. The first step is somewhat akin to satori–the realization that {learning} begins with a simple act of realization.
It is important to remember that Bey was writing this at the dawn of the internet. Yet he saw the parallels between pirate communities in the Caribbean and life online. Certainly the internet feels a lot more like the Las Vegas strip these days, but, one can still find biker bars, so to speak, and wilderness.
Gamification: serious play, flight and surgical simulations
I wrote a masters thesis once upon a time and there I celebrated the seriousness of play. I urged the point that we are playing for our very lives. Since it is unpublished you will have to believe me and accordingly I will not bother to quote myself. I have time and again raised the matter of skills along with knowledge and motivation. Some of these simulations are an amazing opportunity to create skills without the price tag of real failure. Flight simulations, combat simulations, are examples from the military and the airlines. But, we hear as well about surgeons in a distant city using 3D printers to create an image of a damaged organ from which they create a strategy for surgery. We raise eyebrows as our children spend hours perfecting fingering combinations on a game controller — but it is no stretch of imagination to see delicate tasks virtually and robotically augmented and controlled through… game controllers since they are familiar.
But this is only a part of what I mean. I do not want to forget the giggle and rapture of discovery, of halting success. Jumping rope, skipping stones, sandlot baseball, singing, and sometimes just messing around — how do we remember that and capture it and inject it into our classroom? Part of it is certainly starting with the learner as sacred and central, but, that is not all of it…. Fun, discovery, invention, improvisation are fundamentally human just as learning is fundamentally human. How can I in my role of “teacher” remember myself as having fun too, as learner too? Is there a way to drag the state mandated learning outcomes into the rough and tumble of life — to make them authentic again, so that learners see themselves in them?
Resisting Cultural Extinction: Cultural Preservation and Transmission through online learning
There is an irony (perhaps ironies) in making the connection between cultural preservation and online learning. Life on the internet is virtual and representative of altogether different activities in the flesh and blood world. Native cultures are very aware of starvation yet many of us online merely have to brush the Cheeto crumbs from our neck beards. A picture is worth many words (some adult language, long and graphic illustration of processing food):
I love the Cree family processing Goose, the radio playing oldies in the background, I love the busting of chops as his Mom corrects his sloppy job (notice in the comments folks telling him to listen to his Mother) so many cultural values reinforced, even if unintentionally and by non-natives . I love that the conversation switches between Cree and English. I learned (but not practiced), from this how to pluck and bone a goose (though I have processed chickens, ducks and turkeys, never geese) and I was fascinated to watch the transition of cultural knowledge across generation — and so much laughter. The next step might be to make a VR where I practice what I have learned. And we see video conversations frequently on YouTube and native communities (though perhaps not constrained by ethnicity). Indeed:
So between these two videos I have points of comparison between hunting and gathering practices and across cultures. So in the classroom we can explore this theoretically through concepts of anthropology or history. We can explore it as practical activity and process our own food. We can share it with elders and create conversations. I also see getting people to play with their food as a subversive activity in this age of mass produced and processed food. For me this at the heart of what I am relevating in this post — this is Online Pedagogy. To whit our jobs are more and more to help learners refine their art and inspire them to lifelong learning
Final Project: Rational and Method — Bob, Online Pedagogy, ED 655
I suspect that most academic libraries struggle with similar problems, limited permanent staff, multiple locations, extensive hours of operation, and many part-time student employees with frequent turnover, and schedules that do not overlap with supervisors. The work consists of customer service, technology support, providing directions, basic research assistance, and building security. Our part-time employees consist of traditional age undergraduate students. Colby is a highly selective liberal arts college – accordingly our talent pool is a good one. However, these young adults have little previous job experience, and while they have good work ethic developed in schoolwork and sports they often struggle to transfer that to the workplace. While we have tried hard to make “workplace expectations” more transparent we still have more work to do in this area. One way to do this is to move a portion of our training to our Learning Management System.
Online instruction and e-Learning tools are increasingly being used in the academic setting for faculty to deliver course content; however, most libraries have yet to apply the advantages offered by these tools to employee training. This case study from the University of Arizona Libraries (UAL) presents the challenges of sustaining traditional training approaches and the steps to develop an online training program, including identifying specific competencies needed to create effective online training, an approach to prioritizing where to start your program, and requirements for training platform selection. (See and Teetor 2014)
Therefore, the project for this course is to create a blended learning environment for our training purposes. While online presentation is important, what is really at stake is creating a multiplier effect that significantly increases our training contact hours with our employees while not increasing the number of our supervisory staff nor significantly increasing their workload. An important technique is creating a “flipped workplace” so to speak. The Flipped Learning network website offers a straightforward definition on their homepage. “Flipped Learning is a pedagogical approach in which direct instruction moves from the group learning space to the individual learning space, and the resulting group space is transformed into a dynamic, interactive learning environment where the educator guides students as they apply concepts and engage creatively in the subject matter.” There is however, the question of how much content and what type of content moves to the “individual learning space.” Likewise, what are the expectations, and motivations, and reasonable limits to pushing workplace training into the “individual learning space”?
Since the workplace already consists of a “dynamic, interactive learning environment”, there is an inherent logic to this configuration of employee training. “Transformative learning involves ‘reflectively transforming the beliefs, attitudes, opinions, and emotional reactions that constitute our meaning schemes or transforming our meaning perspectives” (Ally 2008). In the case of our professional demeanor unit, the question becomes — what behaviors, performances, or changes in performance and behavior would convince me that learning occurred because of employee’s interaction with the resources in the unit?
In this unit, employees learn skills and practices of workplace professional demeanor. First, what do we mean by “professional demeanor”? A definition of “demeanor” lists, conduct, behavior, appearance, and deportment as key elements — we modify that by setting it in the professional circumstance. Really, these skills and knowledge are assumed in many workplaces but we have learned over years that we cannot assume this; we have to make these expectations explicit. Therefore, this unit will cover:
- library mission, vision and values,
- work ethic,
- workplace appearance,
- basic workplace communication
- phone
- written
- basic customer service
The selection of Moodle for a presentation format is because it is the college’s LMS. Alas, I cannot simply link to this presentation as it is behind Colby’s security protocols. So instead I have provided a screen-cast “tour” of the unit, linked here.
Library_Customer_Service_–_Professional_Demeanor
Where Moodle is Colby’s LMS, our student employees are already familiar with it. The use of our existing online training/reference manual linked from within the LMS creates a feedback loop for our employees reinforcing our instructions to use this resource as they try to answer customer questions or engage in review to reinforce training. The use of “question and answer” forums is also an important tool within the LMS. Specifically this type of forum requires a participant to post before they can see co-workers posting. I am hopeful this will help us avoid superficial engagement, for example, “I agree with Sally.” Another tool used in this unit is Lynda.com this because of our campus subscription to this resource. Leveraging this reduces the amount of content we have to create from scratch. Certainly, there are costs and benefits to outsourcing training in this way. We will seek feedback to understand these tradeoffs. We will pilot the content with our seniors this year. From this, we learn about the usefulness of the content and about the assignments themselves. Indeed one possible scenario is after our seniors “take the course” we give them the keys to the kingdom, give them “teacher” status, and ask them to help us re-write the weak sections. We will also implicitly certify that they do not leave us without exposure to these key workplace skills/knowledge.
A recurrent question both from my direct reports and from the instructor of this class has to do with — what gives us some teeth? — “teeth,” meaning both requiring participation and assessing learning outcomes. One way to give the online instruction “teeth” is for me as the Assistant Director of Customer Service and Administration to be the main instructor. Another is to grade the course like a graduate course, A, B, F. This has some logic because although this grade will not show on their transcript “grading” is an experience this demographic is familiar with and driven by. Once we have all employees, returning and new hires, through the training the number of participants will drop to between six and twelve. Frequency will be at the start of fall and spring semester. One element of this is simple participation — does the employee do what is asked? If they refuse to participate, they are showing a withdrawal from the workplace much like absenteeism. Absenteeism is addressed, though progressive disciplinary procedures. Probably, I might weight non-participation in online instruction differently from missing several shifts, none-the-less both are unacceptable behavior and addressed with the same protocol. Additionally, each year employees receive evaluations. One aspect of this is participation is training. Our move into the online environment simply provides one more piece of evidence for these conversations.
I see two opportunities for assessment. First is in the LMS as they work through the assignments; second in the workplace as they do their work. I care most about their demonstration of learning in the workplace. I think that constructivist theories are also important in thinking about the learning we are encouraging and our assessment.
Inquiry and community were at the core of John Dewey’s educational philosophy and practice. Dewey (1959) believed that an educational experience must fuse the interests of the individual and society, that individual development was dependent upon community. He believed the essence of community was the organic fusion of the public and our private worlds. He also believed that the process of inquiry went to the heart of the educative experience. For Dewey, inquiry involved the generalization of the scientific method to practical problem solving and worthwhile learning. It defined the relationship between thought and action. For Dewey, inquiry was also an essentially social activity. Dewey believed that through collaboration that respected the individual, students would assume responsibility to actively construct and confirm meaning. It is this collaborative constructivist approach that is worthy of further exploration in online learning. (Swan 2009)
This online presentation creates a site for community and practice of peer feedback. This is important in all workplaces simply because learning occurs at all levels of the organization. If this learning is not shared, the organization is vulnerable. However, it is very difficult to create a culture of trust and respect in the workplace. There is no single right answer to creating trust and respect just many approximations. I hope that forum discussions in the LMS about shared learning can be part of these approximations. Another element of using the forums as a public display of learning and requiring peer-to-peer commenting is practice with accountability (“teeth,” as it were) to each other, not just to the supervisor.
Regarding the mission, vision and values section, I am looking for employees to understand themselves as part of a larger organization and part of an important mission. Another aim for this section is to create some context for our work. I think such understanding makes the work meaningful rather than rote. Regarding the work ethic unit there are specific behaviors that could change because of this learning, for example, timesheets completed with greater accuracy and timeliness. This section as drafted has eleven learning outcomes hence our hopes for it is significant (in truth, some of these outcomes may have to move to other instructional activities). Some of this is about reliability creating trust and respect between employees. Some of it is about accountability creating self-awareness about performance and knowledge in the workplace. Finally, some of it is about choosing to do the right thing in the workplace. Regarding the appearance section, first, we are not requiring a particular dress code instead, rather we are suggesting one, by setting the mark for business casual, we will likely achieve smart casual. That said assessment could be defined in behavioristic terms – that is if we see employees more frequently in appropriate clothing and less frequently in inappropriate clothing then we have achieved a change in behavior. For our purposes in the workplace that could be enough. Finally, all of these issues and matters pertain to the last section about workplace communication. If we have done a better job of creating knowledge, we will see among some of our employees an improvement in how they answer the phone and transfer the calls. Some will require additional feedback as they develop skills and some will require additional motivation for us to see this improvement. For us the improvement will look like answering the phone and transferring calls professionally and correctly. In addition, notes left for us regarding customer problems that the student employees had to refer will be more complete and legible.
In conclusion, I think we have made some progress in identifying skills and knowledge we all too often take for granted and assume that our student employees will value and demonstrate. I think there is a coherence to the content and sequence of the instructional unit. However, it is only through usability testing that that will be confirmed. Rather more likely is that some sections will be modified significantly after testing. As mentioned, we will pilot this unit with our seniors this spring. One of the open questions is do we march through the unit, five weeks, at the start of the semester? Alternatively, do we spread the unit across the entire semester? The former solution has the possible problem of overwhelming a new hire, the latter runs the risk of losing impact as the students shift to doing their schoolwork and losing efficacy in the workplace – we need the employees to do the work well immediately. I am not as worried about requiring participation as some of my direct reports. Nor, am I worried about having the employees doing some or all of the work during their regular shifts. That said I perhaps should be listening to them more closely – only practice will show. I have felt distanced from the student employees as my job responsibilities shifted to an administrative nature. I am hopeful that I can reconnect with them through “teaching” this unit and helping them see that these workplace fundamentals are important to us, but more to them.
Ally, M. (2008). Foundations of educational theory for online learning. In Anderson, T., & Elloumi, F. (Eds.). The theory and practice of online learning (2nd ed.) (pp. 15–44). Athabasca, AB, Canada: Athabasca University.
Andrew See & Travis Stephen Teetor (2014) Effective e-Training: Using a Course Management System and e-Learning Tools to Train Library Employees, Journal of Access Services, 11:2, 66-90, DOI: 10.1080/15367967.2014.896217, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15367967.2014.896217
Swan, K., Garrison, D. R. & Richardson, J. C. (2009). A constructivist approach to online learning: the Community of Inquiry framework. In Payne, C. R. (Ed.) Information Technology and Constructivismin Higher Education: Progressive Learning Frameworks. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 43-57.
Hi Bob, good content. I liked hearing you are incorporating strengths language. Just out of curiosity…Do you have them do a strengths inventory? Do they do any further exploration with that? I am trying to get the time with my student government but find that we have to spend so much time on management training, we don’t get to spend enough in leadership training. I liked the way you made that distinction by the way. The only thing I would really change would be the music over voice in the very beginning. That was a bit distracting.
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Hey Bob,
I can imagine you recording a whole series of audio podcasts with similar background music. You could set the tone of the whole course on a very mellow track if you so chose. I’m coming at this at the end of a very busy stressful day and just the opening few bars made me want to grab a beer and chill out – listen to what you had to say. There’s something to be said for that. Maybe, however, all you need is a few bars, then fade the music a bit more as you speak. You could bring it back, with a swell…then chime in again… sort of like a “this American Life” effect. There is so much to do with sound… An enjoyable first pass.
-Owen
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Hi Bob,
I agree with Kim that music over voice was distracting. I also agree with Owen about beer and chill ?
If you limit the music to few bars in the beginning there is nothing that says you cannot have a longer segment at the end of the podcast (in fact, I think it would be nice, especially with your choice of music).
Good job!