Search
There are 14 results.
Category
Tag
Tag
All (38)
Active Learning (1)
Activities (2)
Canvas (4)
Case Studies (1)
Collaboration (2)
Content Creation (3)
Course Maintenance (4)
Course Materials (3)
Discussions (1)
Diversity (1)
Equity (1)
Faculty Presence (1)
Feedback (2)
Grading (3)
Hyperlinks (1)
Images (2)
Inclusion (1)
Infographics (1)
Learning Objectives (1)
Multimodality (1)
Page Design (1)
Peer Review (1)
PowerPoint (2)
Presentations (1)
Representation (1)
Revising (2)
Rubrics (3)
Screen Readers (1)
Social Media (1)
Spreadsheets (1)
UDL (1)
Video (8)
Visual Accessibility (2)
Visual Design (1)
Workload (1)
Format
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.
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).
Improving PowerPoints
Sharing information via PowerPoint presentations is a long-established strategy in higher education. Designing PowerPoint presentations for online courses can pose unique challenges; however, best practices can help overcome these hurdles. With time and attention, faculty and instructional designers can create engaging and purposeful presentations with lasting value.
Using Hotspots
A unique way to share information, images with hotspots offer online learners the opportunity to interact with course content. Learners can click or hover on particular parts of an image and receive pop-ups giving them more information. Hotspots represent information in a particular context; thus, they fulfill the multimedia principle—use words and graphics rather than words alone—and the contiguity principle—align words to corresponding graphics (Clark & Mayer, 2016).
No Sweat Alt Text
What is “alt text”? Alt text is descriptive text linked to an image, graph, or other visual content that allows users to understand the visual without viewing it. Any image online should contain alt text, but guidelines differ depending on whether the image is simply decorative or related to other content on the page.
Problem Based Learning
Problem Based Learning is a teaching method used to facilitate student knowledge acquisition. This teaching method is often confused with Project Based Learning, which centers on students applying knowledge. The focus of Problem Based Learning is students acquiring the knowledge. Since the two methods use the same acronym, they are easily confused, but have different objectives for students.