Thursday, February 28, 2008

Add interactivity To Your Online Course
I want to write an article on interactivity, that is adding interactivity to your online course. This is part of the series I have been writing for Practical Update on Web Based Instruction. In my usual manner I will discuss the reasons behind what I am doing and the technology I use as much as the content of the article. I am writing this article on Google Docs thus making it available for others to read and respond to as it is being written. I have used Google Docs from an earlier time when it was called writely.com and am impressed with the quality of the online word processing program and the opportunity it provides for collaborative writing. I also would like to explore the possibility of working on the article on the iPhone when I am away from my MacBook Pro. I use Notes on the iPhone but do not find it a good system to work on an article with. Notes only works in the portrait mode and not the wider landscape mode on the iPhone. Notes can not be synched with my computer. The only way I have found to get my iPhone notes into my MacBook Pro is to mail them to myself and then convert them to a Word or Pages document. I could also paste the text into a GoogleDocs file.  I do use the mail-a-Notes-document-to-myself to paste my Notes into my iPhone blog, http://JohnsiPhoneJournal.blogspot.com.

What I now want to do is access this document and read it or add to it from the web browser on my iPhone. The browser on the iPhone has the ability to operate in the landscape mode and thus make it possible to work on the article from the iPhone. So that will entail going to http://docs.google.com logging on to my account and then going to this article. Maybe instead I should go the specific URL for this article once it is published with permissions to anyone to edit it. So let's publish this doc and see where it ends up on the internet. OK, the article is published and it is publicly viewable at http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dd42z4fj_6czcr25ds

It will probably be easier to go to docs.google.com and try to log in and get to the article from there (on the iPhone that is).

Here is how I would like to proceed with this article.

1. Start out with Terry Anderson's article Modes of Interaction in Distance Education: Recent Developments and Research Questions, chapter 9 in Moore, M. G., & Anderson, W. G. (2003). Handbook of Distance Education, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, pages 129-144.
2. On the basis of Anderson's taxonomy, decide what types of interaction I wish to discuss in this article.
3. Start with embedding questions on the web page by looking at a recent article, The Benefits of Embedded Question Adjuncts for Low and High Structure Builders by Aimee A. Callender and Mark A. McDaniel in the Journal of Educational Psychology, May 2007, Volume 99, Number 2, pages 339-348.
4. After finishing this article, another area of online instruction I would like to explore is - Self-Regulated learning and online learning. I got tuned into this topic by an article in the March 2008 issue of American Educational Research Journal, Volume 45, Number 1, pages 166-183, Investigating Self-Regulation and Motivation: Historical Background, Methodological Developments, and Future Prospects by Barry J. Zimmerman. I did an ERIC search on self-regulated learning and online learning and identified 30 articles published from 2000-2008.

So let's get started.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

February 25, 2008

February 25, 2008 Notes
Article of the day - Zimmerman, B. J. (2008). Investigating self-regulation and motivation: Historical background, methodological developments, and future prospects. American Educational Research Journal, 45, 166-183.
Keywords: self-regulated learning (SLR), motivation and SLR, event measures of SLR, cyclical analysis of SLR.
Investigate these on ERIC, including self-regulated learning and online learning. (or computer-mediated communication).

Self-regulated learning yielded 501 citations (within keywords search)

Self-regulated learning and online learning yielded 30 citations (from 2000-2008). Saved these results, then exported the citations, descriptors, and abstracts to my computer and printed them out. For 9 of these citations the full text was available from ERIC, so I printed 6 of these. The other 3 did not seem to include online learning.

Checked 4 online course assignments including 1 final project. Responded to all assignments by email; faxed in grade to MSUM for 1 course completion; upgraded online gradebook.

After running a cleaning miniDV cassette on the Sony DCR-TRV9 yesterday, I shot some footage with the built-in mic, with a Sony Dynamic mic, and with a wireless mic. I tried to get the video into Adobe Premier Elements but was unsuccessful. I then ported it into iMovie and into final cut pro. I edited the footage and created a DVD with both versions on it. The Sony camcorder seems to work much better with it's recording/playback heads cleaned.

In the evening I started to read Emma by Jane Austen on the Zire 71. We are going to watch Emma on Masterpiece Theater Sunday night.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

February 19, 2008

February 19, 2008 Pages
Well I am sitting in the blue recliner with the MacBook Pro in my lap watching a lynda.com video on editing audio in FCP. This what I was doing yesterday, only i also was holding a cup of tea, fell asleep, and dumped the cup of tea, on the MacBook, my lap, and the blue recliner. I let the computer dry out overnight and it still seems to be working now. The only casualty seems to be that the left shift key and the caps lock key do not function. If that is the only thing wrong with the computer I think I can continue to use it. I was worried that I would have to buy a new computer.

After the accident, I copied the Ed603GradebookSp08.xlsx file onto a USB flash drive and plugged it into a USB port on the alienware pc and proceeded to work on my student’s Ed 603 assignments on Earthlink Web Mail. I was going to get all caught up on those before I went back to the MacBook but I wanted to finish editing the HV20 Mic Tests Video I am making. So here I am back on the MacBook Pro. My tea cup is setting securely on a side table and not held on my lap while I watch the lynda.com training video.