Search
There are 25 results.
Category
Tag
Tag
All (66)
Active Learning (2)
Activities (3)
Alt Text (2)
Animations (1)
Assessments (1)
Asynchrony (3)
Authentic Activities (2)
Backwards Design (1)
Branching Scenarios (1)
Canvas (4)
Case Studies (1)
Collaboration (2)
Color Contrast (2)
Communication (2)
Community (2)
Content Creation (7)
Content Curation (1)
Content Delivery (1)
Copyright (2)
Course Maintenance (5)
Course Materials (7)
Course Preparation (2)
Discussions (1)
Diversity (2)
Equity (2)
Feedback (3)
Formative Assessments (4)
Game-Based Learning (2)
Gamification (1)
Group Work (2)
Hyperlinks (1)
Images (1)
Inclusion (1)
Infographics (2)
Learning Objectives (2)
Multimodality (3)
Page Design (1)
Peer Reviews (1)
Podcasts (1)
PowerPoint (2)
Presentations (2)
Representation (1)
Revising (2)
Rubrics (3)
Scaffolding (1)
Screen Readers (1)
Spreadsheets (1)
Summative Assessments (1)
Synchrony (3)
Third-Party Tools (1)
UDL (1)
Universal Design for Learning (UDL) (1)
Video (10)
Visual Accessibility (2)
Visual Design (2)
Written Assignments (1)
Format
Hyperlink Dos and Don'ts
When designing a course, you will want to ensure that all students can access the websites and documents that you link. Accessible hyperlinks are particularly important for students with screen readers, who will hear links read out loud. This piece contains best practices for writing and formatting accessible hyperlinks so that all learners can access the content that you have curated for your course.
Spreadsheet Accessibility
Spreadsheets are used for a broad array of data-related tasks and projects across numerous disciplines. Maximizing the utility of spreadsheets included as course materials requires careful attention towards their contents and formatting. In this post, we present recommendations for enhancing the clarity, consistency, and accessibility of course spreadsheets for students.
Branching Scenario Best Practices Guide
Designed to simulate real-world experiences, branching scenarios are powerful tools for increasing student engagement. Like a choose-your-own-adventure book, a branching scenario invites users to explore a virtual world, using knowledge and skills from their coursework and information shared within the scenario to make decisions. The decisions they make lead them down different pathways (some of which may include embedded documents and videos) towards different endings. Depending on the complexity of the branching scenarios and the choices students make, they can experience a variety of different possible outcomes within a single scenario.
Engagement Series: Introduction
There are many components to consider when developing an online course; a key framework to inform course development is student engagement. The Glossary of Education Reform defines student engagement as “the degree of attention, curiosity, interest, optimism, and passion that students show when they are learning or being taught, which extends to the level of motivation they have to learn and progress in their education” (Great Schools Partnership, 2016, para. 1). Developing and evaluating course content through the lens of engagement can help instructors create an environment that is conducive to learning and mastery of course outcomes.
Rubrics as a Tool to Support Equity and Inclusion
While student populations have become increasingly diverse, many groups, including first-generation, non-native English speakers, and individuals with disabilities, still face barriers and bias that can derail their success in college (Super et al., 2020). Traditional grading practices—including penalties for late work, writing in dialects other than standard English, and even plagiarism— are prone to bias and only perpetuate disparities, the research says (Feldman, 2019; Savini, 2021).