Showing posts with label Summer Online Teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Summer Online Teaching. Show all posts

Monday, July 17, 2023

Bruno Balances His Workload by Teaching Online During Short Semesters


Bruno is a full professor at a four-year institution teaching courses in the discipline of sociology at the undergraduate level. His three-credit 100-level online courses are offered during the winter break (for three weeks) and summer semester (for six weeks). Course enrollment varies from 25 to 35 participants. He teaches his online courses during these time periods to focus specifically on his teaching and research. During these times, he does not have any service responsibilities and is able to spend set hours for the course and research activities. He uses design, support, teaching, and time-allocation strategies to balance his workload.

Design

  • The first time he designed his online course, he spent about 40 hours preparing the materials.
  • Once the online course was designed, his time to prepare the course for each offering was considerably reduced.

Support

  • Seeks one-on-one instructional design support from the teaching and learning center at his institution.
  • Obtains content ideas and course materials from external resources, such as a local center related to the course topics, short videos from YouTube, and the historical society photos.

Teaching

  • Uses a variety of teaching strategies for his online course that include: PowerPoint lectures, short videos, group discussions, quizzes, papers, interviews, and the learning management system drop box for learner personal feedback.
  • The difference between the two online course offerings is the amount of content employed in the course.
  • For the shorter session, he removes some of the readings.

Time-Allocation

  • Uses automated grading on quizzes and group grading instead of individual grading.
  • Provides grading online all the time versus intense grading done for face-to-face courses.
  • Spends 20 hours per week for his online course and allocates 10 to 15 hours for his research activities.

 

For instructors whose responsibilities involve teaching, research, and service, teaching online during shorter semesters in contrast to long semesters can be an effective strategy for balancing workload. Service activities such as committee meetings, conference participation, and institutional projects, can be time-consuming and side-track instructors from teaching and research. Online teaching and research activities require focus, discipline, committed blocks of time, and anticipation of course responsibilities. By choosing to teach online during short semesters, instructors can dedicate focused time to their research, collecting fieldwork data from anywhere.

 

Reference

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