Wednesday, August 31, 2016

KISS Method - or how not to hate everything about course design

One of the best pieces of advice I ever received when I began teaching was this: KISS. But, I didn't really like it when I first heard it because surely simple was bad, simple was lazy, simple showed that I didn't care about my course - right?

No. Simple doesn't mean any of those things. Simple means manageable, it means clarity, it means streamlined. Simple means it's something you can accomplish, and accomplish well. It's how you thrive as an instructor, as a student, as a curriculum designer. It's showing finesse in what you do. In the words of Coco Chanel: Take one thing off before leaving the house.

As I think about the participants in this program, I'm reminded of KISS because there is an urge to overindulge in "newness", in trying new things.

Newness isn't bad. Trying new things isn't bad.

Here's my urge, maybe my challenge: PICK ONE.

Only one. One thing to try. One assignment to redesign. One instructional delivery method. Maybe even, one lecture. Just one.


It's not impossible. It's vital

It will force you to focus. Force you to identify the most important, most vital, most in need of attention element of your course. Maybe you focus some other way. Maybe you focus by choosing something you know you can handle during a busy fall semester. However you chose, the important part is to chose. 

Remember: 



Tuesday, August 30, 2016

No, You Won't Remember Later

After my meeting this morning with Roz and a Bootcamp participant, I had something I wanted to blog about, but I was on my way to class.

I told myself I'd remember later and do it after class ended.



Lies.

I did not remember.



Even now as I"m typing this, I can't remember what it was that struck me. It was probably pretty cool, too.


Learn from my mistake: Even if it's not a "full" blog, take a jotting, give yourself a reminder.


Friday, August 26, 2016

Back to School

Watching all the freshman on campus made me think about how overwhelming that experience can be for students. 😨For most, everything is new. New can be amazing but it's also a bit scary.

Then they come to class and get a syllabus 📑 full of everything they're not sure they'll be able to do, or wondering how they're going to balance everything and not fail. That can also impact how they relate to your class.

As I began explaining the course expectations to my students, who are not freshman, they looked a bit glassy-eyed. 🤓 This made me think: how does my syllabus impact their learning? Does it set them up for success or for failure? Is it better to be welcoming or get the "worst part" over, like a bandaid?

I don't have any answers but it's something I'm thinking about.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Daily Postings?

Taking up Roz's challenge to blog more frequently -

...

...

...

But, I don't have anything to say. It's the first week of classes. Life is crazy. And...a blog post?!


Maybe tomorrow...

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Expanding How I Conceptualize Blogging


Roz: shorter more frequent blogs
Me: *blink*

(I wrote this while I was walking to the gym...it didn't want to post from my phone....so I "remade" it when I got home)

Shorter blogs. 

Tuesday, August 16, 2016

...on being linear

Of the many things I've learned through this process, through this independent study, the thing I've learned the most - or perhaps, felt the most, is that I'm far more linear than I've ever thought. That linear thought process extends to more than just how I learn; it heavily impacts how I teach, how I think about teaching, and how I approach developing the lessons I teach. 

When things are linear, they make sense to me. I can see the patterns, I can find the point, identify the objectives. However, when things become less linear, when the pattern isn't as easily discernible, that's when I feel less comfortable. That's when I feel like I'll be unable to keep track of things. 
I was challenged to develop a visual for the text write up I developed for my Grab Bag on Avoiding Death by PowerPoint. As, I discussed in a previous post, I'm also partial to words. In stark moments of self-reflection, I feel like a vulcan when I say things like, words add clarity. A picture might be worth a thousand words, but a thousand words add a clarity often not achievable by an image. My first attempt was to do something completely different - something with few words. Maybe if it was all pictures, it would translate better, or differently than my words. But, how do you create a picture out of words? I took my first stab at it, and even I didn't know what I was trying to create, what message I was trying to convey. In a word, it was a mess. I thought about it. A lot. I vented about my inability to do whatever it was I was trying to do, but had been unable to define. After a couple of days of thinking, and trying to figure it out, I decided to try something different. 

I have a background in graphic design. I know how to design websites. Again, a linear process. At least, a linear process. Navigation in easy steps, a logical process. Beginning to end. I decided to try that approach with trying a new visual. I thought about it as a website. How would students navigate it? How would I guide them through the process? How would I engage them in self navigation through the module? 


I can up with this - it was a mind map of what the website would look like, how students would access the information. How I would lay it out. Unsurprisingly, it's still highly linear, but there are multiple points of entry. A sort of choose your own adventure for the students. I have suggested a process, a logical progression, but if they want to do it differently, they have the freedom to move between the pages at will. 

Maybe it's still too linear for some, maybe it's not linear enough for others. There's no perfect solution. There's no perfect lesson. No lesson is one size fits all, no matter how much you try. The best you can do is try, see what works, and try again. Even if it is linear, or images, or highly illogical

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Teaching the Experts

Many aspects of this independent study process have been challenging for me. Today, I wanted to really think through one of the grab bags. With the semester looming on the horizon, I've been working on building my 259A course for the fall. Maybe it's because I've been in the mood, but I sat down and typed out a draft for a grab bag. I quickly realized there were some fundamental differences in designing for undergrads and designing for graduate students and/or faculty. While I admit students know a lot, they are typically not considered experts in their field. With faculty, they are. I pondered the question, how do you design for someone who is an expert? What do experts still need to know, and how do you convey to them, or convince them, they need to know what you have to teach them?


I'm hardly the expert in their content. There are days where I barely feel like an expert in my own content area, but do I have expertise to share with them? Yes. Am I an expert in teaching? No. Yet, there are things, aspects of teaching, I feel I have a level of expertise in. If I start from the perspective of them, my "learners", being the expert, how do I impart knowledge to them? 

I think for me, I settled on started with the research. By starting with the sources that proved my suggested content held merit for everyone. I think that freed me a bit; I didn't have to play the expert. I believe in what I was encouraging them to try, and I found other people who could back up my belief with facts. Then, I invited them to try it out - to test it for themselves. 


By allowing them to embark on a self-guided learning experience, they were the ones in control of their learning. They would be able to infuse their expertise into their own educational experience. Maybe it was the right approach; maybe it wasn't. I once again find myself in the "learner" and "teacher" position. The process remains inherently iterative. Keep it going until I figure it out, until it works.