Monday, January 27, 2020
Yes, I Agree and...
We all know the drill. We have decided to use the discussion board feature on Canvas to engage with our students and have them increase their peer-to-peer interaction. We determine the topic and issue an assignment with directions asking students to begin the topics. Once that is done, they are also asked to comment on the topics started by their fellow students. We sit back and wait and nothing happens. Well, to be fair, some students post and then other students give one to five word responses that do not move the conversation forward at all. So what went wrong? Dr. Beth René Roepnack has written a concise article on how we can improve online discussion by simply changing a couple of things. Her article appears on Faculty Focus and she offers the following suggestions. " I adjusted the
structure of my online discussions from students starting threads (you know the
drill, post-and-reply-to-two) to the instructor starting them, which creates a
more organic discussion structure similar to classroom conversations. This
simple modification, along with asking open-ended questions from the deep end
of Bloom’s Taxonomy, creates discussions that support student learning and engagement
with the material and each other." You can read the entire article here. If you use her suggestions, let me know if you experienced the same results that she did.