Course clarity

“ I don’t use Blackboard. The students don’t like it.” How many times have I heard faculty say that?

 

That refrain was on my mind as I spent some time with the online course design rubrics and gained insight into my own teaching. I focused particularly on the rubric by Blackboard because I am most familiar with that tool. Blackboard use provides flexibility because the semester schedule often shifts in journalism courses. But only in thinking about Blackboard as the centerpiece for an online course have I started to view it as more than a syllabus device. Why don’t students like Blackboard? They complain that it is disjointed and annoying to use. Part of the blame lies with me, since I feel my courses have lacked clarity and I have failed to see Blackboard as a means to develop a learning community.

 

The online rubrics highlight a holistic approach that fuses content and presentation, learner interaction and engagement, technology use, and measurable assessment and outcomes. This week we have gained tools to start building our courses toward the goal of an online course community. We may go only part of the way through selective use of blended learning techniques. But I can see how these techniques can add clarity to my courses and help the students feel more invested in the environment and effort. I always tell my students that writing is the purest form of thinking because one needs to discern the main points to write succinctly. The same is true for writing courses. Clarity is essential to learning. Course design sets out the road ahead so students can pursue it with understanding and purpose.

2 thoughts on “Course clarity

  1. Leah Chuchran

    Hi Sheila,
    I definitely appreciate your post. It is always interesting to see what “sticks” the most with each individual.

    This is such an important topic of discussion. Yes, I’ve heard that phrase from students AND faculty in reference to Blackboard.

    In today’s educational world, no matter the mode, the instructional design piece is a critical component. I also see it as part of the Web Literacy skills that individuals should possess.

    The rubrics are excellent resources that can be used to evaluate a course – and, perhaps we, as a cohort could consider creating a checklist of “how to set up a Bb course”. What do you think?

    My best,
    Leah

    Reply
  2. Sheila Tefft

    Leah,

    Good idea. I was using the design rubrics to take a new look at my courses. But a straightforward checklist, perhaps posted to and advertised on Blackboard Resources, would focus these issues for many users.

    Sheila

    Reply

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