Beatrice, an
associate professor at a four-year institution, teaches three-credit psychology
online courses at the undergraduate level. Her academic load includes teaching
two courses per semester (one course is supervision), conducting research (70%
of her time), and participating in service activities. She teaches online
during the regular semester for 14 weeks and during the summer semester for
four weeks. Her course enrollment during the regular semester varies from 40 to
100 and during the summer semester from 20 to 40. Her online courses are
content-based, and her activities are based on the course textbook. Her focus
for workload management is on quality individual feedback on assignments. For
her courses, she uses design, support, teaching, and time allocation strategies
to balance her workload based on class enrollment. Below are Beatrice’s strategies for balancing her
workload.
Design |
|
Support |
|
Teaching |
|
Time-Allocation |
|
By using pre-designed content and selecting a key design aspect of the online course, as Beatrice does with feedback, instructors can better manage their workload when they have a course with high enrollment. Beatrice provides quick responses by email. This can be a challenge for instructors whose learners perceive that they are available 24/7. The solution is to use teaching strategies that create boundaries and communicate these boundaries to the learners. Another teaching strategy in this situation is to draft a response to the learner while it is still fresh in your mind but hold back sending the response right away. This avoids learners’ perception that you will always answer their emails immediately.
Reference
Conceição, S. C. O, Lehman, R. M. (2011). Managing Online Instructor Workload: Strategies for Finding Balance and Success. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.