Sandy is an academic staff
for an international organization within a four-year higher education
institution. Her primary position within this organization involves
administrative work; however, she is responsible for teaching one four-credit
undergraduate online course. Sandy’s online course has an average enrollment of
20 participants and is offered during the regular academic semester from 8 to
16 weeks in duration. The course content focuses on current global issues. This
means that her course must be updated each time she teaches it. Sandy uses
design, support, teaching, and time allocation strategies to manage her
workload.
Design
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- Bases the design of her
course on the textbook and the most current new. The textbook provides a
framework for identifying global issues, which she then enriches with more
current events occurring in the world at the time of the course delivery.
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Invites speakers on a
podcast and links to other podcasts and news events.
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Uses discussion forums, team projects, and a
mandatory orientation.
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Does advanced planning and organization because of
timely content.
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The first time she designed
the online course, she started planning two months ahead. However, once she
designed the first online course, she followed a model for the next offerings.
Using the model, she was able to reduce her time for course design and have
the course ready to be released for the learners two weeks before the
beginning of the semester.
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Advanced organization is
essential when coordinating course speakers who are identified based on
expertise in current issues. These speakers may participate either
synchronously or asynchronously. For synchronous participation of invited
guests, Sandy has to schedule time and equipment in advance. For asynchronous
speaker participation, she has to pre-record and post the guest lecture in
the learning management system before the course begins.
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Support
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- Uses the textbook, guest
speakers, podcasts, and web links as external support. The textbook as a
dynamic resource tool, a springboard to identify and search for new content
information.
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Incorporates podcasts from
the Internet and web links related to global issues.
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Models her online teaching
on other colleagues who have used effective strategies such as understanding
learner expectations and creating rubrics to grade assignments.
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Teaching
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- Uses one-way content
presentation of global issues in her course.
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Participates in interactive
activities with learners as content expert, observer, and facilitator.
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Uses a team project as a
teaching strategy to bring content together at the end of her online course.
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Makes the orientation a
mandatory activity because she believes that in this way learners will be more
comfortable online and feel a sense of community.
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Time-Allocation
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- Teaches one online course
at a time along with her administrative responsibilities.
-
Streamlines her time
allocation for the design stage of her online course by pre-planning and
organizing her course materials, reusing existing resources, and using a
dynamic textbook.
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Spends 15 to 20 hours each
week updating the current news for the online course, checking on the
discussion forum, and grading learner assignments.
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Blocks out specific time
for grading on Monday morning and periodically checks the discussion board to
avoid intense work at one time.
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Limits the number of
discussion board postings per week to reduce her workload.
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Checks the course on
weekends, but this is not accomplished at a regularly scheduled time.
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Managing the workload when
the course content must be kept current can be challenging. Sandy discovered
efficient strategies to reduce workload before the beginning of the course. She
plans and organizes course materials based on external resources and
prioritizes her time. Planning helps Sandy focus on the teaching rather than
the design during the course delivery. Using external resources as a support
strategy can enhance learner experience, reduce instructor workload during course
delivery, and provide flexibility when reusing the resources in future courses.
During the online course, prioritizing time and setting boundaries can be a
time saver for instructors whose teaching is one piece of their work
responsibility.
Reference
Conceição,
S. C. O, Lehman, R. M. (2011). Managing Online Instructor Workload:
Strategies for Finding Balance and Success. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
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