Showing posts with label Prioritizing Time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prioritizing Time. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Widening Perspectives Invite Openness: Strategies for Prioritizing Time and Managing Workload

 

Image credit: Pexels/Antoni Shkraba

In this article, we provide four strategies for rethinking how to prioritize time and manage workload: (1) look at online teaching from an open perspective, (2) adapt course design, (3) modify workload strategies, and (4) rethink how to prioritize and manage workload.

 

Teaching From an Open Perspective

 

Instructors who are open to new perspectives and have ventured into online teaching have discovered differences between face-to-face and online teaching regarding workload. These differences can be looked at in terms of space (tangible versus elusive), time (clear sense versus flexible concept), boundaries (specific location versus no geographical limits), use of the senses (can see and hear learners and touch objects versus the need to adapt senses and create closeness), level of planning (spontaneously add and adapt teaching versus pre-planning), and mental and emotional efforts (predictable time to focus mind and emotion versus perception of always being connected).

 

There are many approaches instructors must use to embark on the online venture such as openness to these differences, organization, discipline, ability to distinguish between work and personal life, and flexibility.

 

Adapting the Course Design

 

It is commonly perceived that instructors can take their face-to-face course and move it to the online environment. However, this is a misperception. Adapting a course requires understanding the online teaching and learning environment, planning, and intentional design.

 

For a new online course, the tasks and time spent designing and delivering the course will take longer and be time-consuming. For a course converted from face-to-face to online, you must rethink how you can teach your course in the new environment. For revising existing online courses, you will need to revisit your tasks and time spent to become more efficient when teaching the course again.

 

Course design should be seen as an essential aspect of teaching online. While in a face-to-face course instructors tend to consider teaching from the first to the last day of class, in an online course the course duration spans from design to course delivery. Therefore, to adapt your course to the online environment, you need to envision the “big picture.” We suggest identifying course tasks and using an instructional design framework to systematically design your online course.

 

Modifying Workload Strategies

 

When instructors adapt their courses to the online environment and use a design framework to guide the course development, they become aware of the differences between face-to-face and online courses, tasks to be accomplished in the new environment, and the period for online courses, they realize that they have to modify their workload strategies.

 

Our book, Managing Online Instructor Workload: Strategies for Finding Balance and Success, describes four strategies for managing workload: design, support, teaching, and time allocation. These strategies are influenced by various institutional factors, including the type of institution, policies and procedures that guide the institutional practices, number of courses taught, enrollment, level of instruction, position ranking of the instructor, and infrastructure support. Depending on how these factors are combined, instructor workload is affected.

 

Rethinking How to Prioritize Time and Manage Workload

 

Teaching online can be time-consuming. It involves a combination of institutional factors and requires different instructional preparation. It can increase instructors' workload if they don’t know what designing and delivering online instruction entails. Instructors who have not used a systematic approach to adapting their materials for the online environment tend to use workload strategies that they are familiar with but that may not necessarily be effective or efficient in their work and personal life. To find balance and success in online teaching, instructors must widen their perspectives, rethink their teaching practices, and be open to new ideas.

 

Rethinking means considering and reconsidering your current teaching practices in a new light. When going through this mental process, the tendency is to reinforce old assumptions and ways of doing things. What needs to happen is a change in mindset – abandoning old assumptions about teaching and discovering and accepting new ones. We suggest a four-step rethinking process.

 

The process of rethinking starts with looking at your current teaching practices by identifying your course tasks (design, administrative, facilitative, and evaluative). Then, use an instructional design framework as a systematic approach to guide you in developing a new course or revisiting an existing one. The next step is determining what tasks you are accomplishing when designing and delivering the course and estimating how much time you might spend on the course.

 

Once you can review your process and identify strategies that best fit your situation, consider alternatives, then decide on the workload strategies that will balance your work and personal life. This process of rethinking your teaching practices is a dynamic one. Your work and personal life situation are in constant motion. You need to revisit the process regularly to find balance and success but remember that you are the person who knows what works best for you. Check the table below to see which chapters on our book provide the action steps.

 

Rethinking Process for Prioritizing Time and Managing Workload

Action Steps

Chapter(s) in Book

1. Look at current teaching practices by identifying course tasks

Chapter 3

2. Use an instructional design framework to guide the design of a new course or revisit an existing one

Chapters 3 and 4

3. Determine the tasks for course design and delivery and time estimation

Chapter 3 and 4

4. Consider alternatives and decide on strategies that provide balance between work and personal life

Chapter 5

 

Reference

 

Conceição, S. C. O, Lehman, R. M. (2011). Managing Online Instructor Workload: Strategies for Finding Balance and Success. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Monday, July 10, 2023

Kay Blocks Out Time for Her Online Courses

 

Kay is a Clinical Assistant Professor at a four-year institution on a 12-month contract. She teaches 3 to 4-credit undergraduate courses in the discipline of health care. Her courses are offered during the regular 15- or 16-week semester and during the 12-week summer semester. Her online course enrollment varies from 20 participants during the regular semester to 12 participants during the summer semester. Her responsibilities focus on teaching, administration, and service. Kay’s teaching workload involves 12 units per semester: 7 to 10 credits of teaching, one credit for service, 1 to 3 credits for administration, and 0.5 credit for e-learning for the department. She teaches two online courses during the summer semester. As part of her administrative duties, she coordinates a program within her discipline. Her face-to-face courses are hands-on and interactive. When moving her courses to the online environment, Kay had to rethink her workload by incorporating design, support, teaching, and time allocation strategies.

 

Design

  • Focuses on how to distribute course activities to balance her workload among all courses in each semester.
  • Spends 10 to 12 hours preparing the online courses before the course starts.
  • Designs throughout the course duration and spends four hours per week designing the course during the semester.

Support

  • Seeks course innovation by attending conferences and involving learners in sharing resources.
  • Uses one-on-one support from the teaching and learning center at her institution, peer support, and institutional support through the help desk.

Teaching

  • Uses group discussions, games, and creative activities as her teaching strategies.
  • Develops a detailed syllabus about course expectations.
  • Communicates to learners her guidelines for responding to their emails (within 48 hours) and communicates her level of participation during the course delivery.
  • First checks the discussion forum and emails and then moves on to other aspects of the online course.

Time-Allocation

  • Is disciplined with her schedule for the online courses. Mondays and Wednesdays, she blocks out time from 9:00 AM to noon for online courses by closing her office door and letting other colleagues know that she is teaching at that time.
  • Reserves time in her calendar for teaching online. 
  • Checks her courses every day as a cross out mental check list for the day.
  • Allows some flexibility in case personal issues arise. When a personal issue occurs, she rearranges her schedule.

 

Kay’s workload focuses primarily on teaching and service. Thus, blocking out time for the online courses is critical for helping her manage her workload. Kay closes her office door during these times to avoid distractions and dedicates exclusive time for her learners. In doing this, she shows colleagues that she is allocating specific time for her online courses during regular work hours. Kay is very disciplined with implementing her closed-door approach and checking her online courses every day as a way to mentally cross off her daily tasks.

 

Reference

Conceição, S. C. O, Lehman, R. M. (2011). Managing Online Instructor Workload: Strategies for Finding Balance and Success. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Monday, May 22, 2023

Using the Template for Managing Tasks and Prioritizing Time

 

As we noted in our previous postings, our “Being There for the Online Learner Model” and “Framework for Creating Presence” (Lehman & Conceição, 2010) were developed to help you understand that presence, which is “perceptual” in nature, is an important part of designing and delivering an online course. With this in mind, you are better able to bring the human aspect into your online course, make it a personal experience, and more effectively engage your students.

This week, we’re introducing our “Template for Managing Tasks and Prioritizing Time,” found in our book, Managing Online Instructor Workload: Strategies for Finding Balance and Success (Conceição & Lehman, 2011). This template helps you look at any type of course from a broad perspective and better manage your tasks and time.

  • For new courses, the template can help you estimate the tasks you may do and the time you may spend during the design and delivery of the course. 
  • For converting courses, the template can assist you in rethinking how you can teach your course in the new environment.
  • For existing online courses, the template can help you revisit your tasks and your time spent to become more efficient and effective when teaching the same course again. 

 

Template for Managing Tasks and Prioritizing Time

 

Course Sequence            

Type of Task 

Week # 

Time Spent

Before the course                

Design

 

 

During and end of course      

Administrative

 

 

 

 

 

Facilitative

 

 

 

 

 

 

Evaluative

 

 

 

 

 

 

Download the Template for Managing Tasks and Prioritizing Time.

 

In addition to the template, our book provides examples of how this template can be used in each of the three instances. It also suggests strategies that instructors can use to maintain their quality of life. Teaching online can be overwhelming if you let it control you. Managing workload and prioritizing time help put you “in control.”

 

References


Lehman, R. M. & Conceição, S. C. O. (2010). Creating a Sense of Presence in Online Teaching: How to “Be There” for Distance Learners. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass

Conceição, S. C. O, Lehman, R. M. (2011). Managing Online Instructor Workload: Strategies for Finding Balance and Success. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.