- Overview
- Speakers
Building Community Online Series - Session 1: Leveraging Your LMS: Building a Community of Inquiry Asynchronously - Microlearning Burst
Where: Webinar/Virtual
When: Thursday, February 4, 2021
10:15am - 11:00am
Note: Zoom login instructions will be sent the day prior. If you have not received login instructions by 4:00pm the day before the webinar, please check your spam folder, if you still have not received the login details please email nercomp@nercomp.org.
Workshop Organizers: Christine Boyland of Bryn Mawr College and Heather Richards of Nichols College
Registration Fee:
NERCOMP Member: Free
Non-Member: $25
Event Overview
Whether you teach fully online or in a remote or hybrid class, creating a community of inquiry (Garrison, 2007) through social, cognitive, and teaching presence will enhance your students’ educational experience and improve student learning outcomes. This first session in our three-part series will introduce the concept of a Community of Inquiry and then show how an instructor or course designer can create asynchronous communicative, collaborative, critical, and reflective activities online. For teaching presence, modes of modeling intellectual engagement and recommendations for facilitated discussions and feedback will be introduced. For social presence, we will look at options for shared meaning-making through group work and interactive assignments, and for cognitive presence, we will discuss ways to encourage engagement with course materials to build an evolving understanding of the topic and share that knowledge with peers. This session is designed for instructors, designers/technologists, and librarians.
Learning Objectives
Participants in this session will:
- Understand the Community of Inquiry Framework and how to apply it in your course context.
- Generate asynchronous strategies for creating teaching presence, cognitive presence, and social presence in your course.
- Devise an initial course design to enhance students’ connection to the instructor, course content, and each other.
This Series has 3 Sessions (please sign up for each individually). You are not required to attend all 3.
Upcoming Sessions:
- February 11, 2021: Making Face-Time Count: Strategies to Promote Engagement in Live Online Meetings (and Common Pitfalls to Avoid)
- February 18, 2021: Instructor-Generated Videos for Increasing Social Presence in the Online and HyFlex Learning Environments: Teaching and Instructional Design in the COVID Pandemic and Beyond
Registration Cancellation Policy:
By clicking on the "Order Now" button, you are indicating a commitment to attend and will be held responsible for the registration fee. Your fee can be refunded if you notify us of a cancellation at least 1 day prior to the event via email to nercomp@nercomp.org.
Christine Boyland
Christine Boyland came to Bryn Mawr in 2006, as the Director of the Language Learning Center. Concurrent with her employment at the College, she served as a Technology Fellow for the National Institute for Technology in Liberal Education (NITLE), conducting in-person and web-based workshops on a variety of technology and pedagogy topics to a national audience. Before coming to Bryn Mawr, Christine taught at Yale University, Trinity College, and the College of William and Mary, and she was an Instructional Designer at St. Anselm College.
Maria Ocando Finol
Maria Ocando Finol is joining Bryn Mawr College as an Educational Technology Specialist, after receiving her Phd in Spanish from Arizona State University. As part of Bryn Mawr College’s Library of Information Technology Services, she will focus on helping faculty and students include technology into their academic work in meaningful ways. With a background in applied linguistics, Maria’s research interests include developing intercultural competence through technology, using film for pedagogical purposes, and the roles of teachers in tech-mediated classrooms. Before coming to Bryn Mawr College, Maria was a Connected Academics research fellow at ASU, where she developed professionalization initiatives for Humanities doctoral students. She was also the founding president for CALL Club at ASU, a graduate student-led organization focusing on computer-assisted language learning, and the lead organizer of AZCALL 2018.