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SLIDES: Allen, Christopher (2014, July 30). “Discussion Activities with Moodle”. Slideshare. Retrieved July 30, 2014, from http://slideshare.net/ChristopherA
Discussion Activities with Moodle
ABSTRACT: “A powerful tool in our pedagogy toolbox are discussion assignments using Moodle forums as activities.This presentation demonstrates what they are for, how to configure them for your course, some best practices and warnings.”
• Though grading (ratings) are not required, some evidence that you are participating is important• I call this “Visible Attention”• Try to show you are watching daily
• Appreciate not only good posts or responses, but good questions
• Clarify questions • Connect content to rest of course
• Forums discussion are best when all members (both students and faculty) offer…• Social Presence •Members share personal stories, express emotions—be “real”
• Cognitive Presence •Members are able to construct and confirm new meaning and
connections from each other
• Teaching Presence •Members know and support their learning outcomes, and believe that
• Discussions stop at end of activity• …thus can loose energy & synergy if topics are
relevant to the entire course • Course culture is important
• …if students can see others slacking or “social loafing”, quality of discussions will go down •Reward good behavior with attention and appreciation•Nip problems early and privately
• May not scale with large number of students• …as it may become too noisy •I have used it successfully for courses as small as 12 and as large as
Additional ResourcesForum Module HelpManaging a Moodle course : Activities : Forum module. (2014, March 25). - MoodleDocs. Retrieved July 29, 2014, from http://docs.moodle.org/27/en/Forum_module
TipsDyversHands. (2013, September 24). How to best use Forum in Moodle courses: Ideas and tips by professionals. . Retrieved July 29, 2014, from http://www.mulinblog.com/best-use-forum-moodle-courses-ideas-tips-professionals/KEYQUOTE: “A compilation of good ideas for using Forum in a Moodle course, edited out of a discussion thread in Teaching with Moodle: An Introduction, which is a MOOC course offered by learn.moodle.net and attracted more than 9,000 participants. Many course participants shared ideas and tips for how they creatively use various tools in a Moodle course.”
PresenceLehman, R.M. & Conceicao, S.C.O. (2010). Creating a sense of presence in online teaching: How to “be there” for distance learners. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. ISBN: 978-0-470-56490-5. http://www.amazon.com/Creating-Sense-Presence-Online-Teaching/dp/0470564903/KEYQUOTE: “The importance of creating a sense of presence in online teaching and learning environments cannot be overestimated. If you think about the basic difference between learning in the classroom and learning exclusively online, it is the separation of the instruction from the learner and the learners from each other. This separation often leads to feelings of isolation on the part of participants and has been a major cause of learner dissatisfaction.…Our book focuses on the need for creating presence in the online environment, explores the concept of presence, and address the ways in which the creation of presence can contribute to more interactive online teaching and learning.”
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Asynchronous Discussion ForumsAndresen, M. A. (2009). Asynchronous discussion forums: success factors, outcomes, assessments, and limitations. Educational Technology & Society, 12 (1), 249–257. Retrieved July 29, 2014 from http://www.ifets.info/journals/12_1/19.pdfKEYQUOTE: “It is clear that asynchronous discussion forums can achieve high levels of learning, but people in decision-making positions must be aware of the conditions for this to occur. Asynchronous online courses are not a method of displacing instructors. In fact, because of the nature of successful asynchronous discussion forums, asynchronous online courses need to be as instructor intensive (instructor to learner ratio) as the traditional classroom. And in some cases, namely problem-based learning, the asynchronous discussion forum does not appear to be appropriate. In other words, there is no one size fits all application of asynchronous online learning. Consequently, asynchronous discussion forums may form part of a more generalized model of learning—a blended learning approach.Though some of the early research on asynchronous learning environments, including the asynchronous discussion forums, has been accused of lacking in both quantity and quality (see Wegner et al., 1999, Kyounghee Lim, 2001), this is clearly no longer the case, particularly for the quality of research.”
Moodle Ratings & GradingMendes, M. (2012) Best Practices: Using Ratings to Grade Moodle Forums. Moodlerooms. Retrieved July 29, 2014, from http://www.moodlerooms.com/resources/blog/best-practices-using-ratings-grade-moodle-forumsKEYQUOTE: “Teachers will enable ratings so that they can grade participant’s posts based on the relevance of a response and the level engagement in the discussions. In today’s post, I am going to highlight how configure a Forum with ratings and discuss the available aggregation methods.”
Discussion Board RubricsChinn, ?. (2011, April 14). Discussion Board Tips & Pedagogy. Central Western University. Retrieved July 29, 2014, from http://www.cwu.edu/~media/cwuonline/factutorials/Bb9_updated_tutorials/DisBoard_TipsRubricsPed_rev1-11.pdfKEYQUOTE: “Develop a grading rubric that encourages class discussion, one that makes the composition of postings pleasant and informative, but also a rubric that is not overwhelming for the instructor to use when it becomes time to grade.”