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  2. Teaching in a Digital Age: Second Edition (2019)

Teaching in a Digital Age: Second Edition (2019)

Guidelines for designing teaching and learning for a digital age

Cover image used for Teaching in a Digital Age: Guidelines for Teaching and Learning [Second Edition]A.W. (Tony) Bates

Teaching in higher education in a digital age requires a new approach because of changes in the economy and changes in technology. 

Faculty and instructors are continually facing questions such as “How do I effectively teach an increasingly diverse student population?”, “How do I engage and support my students as class sizes increase?”, “How do I use multi-media and other resources to build a high quality course?”, and a host of other questions.

Drawing on his 40+ years of experience in higher education in Canada and around the world, Contact North | Contact Nord Research Associate Dr. Tony Bates has authored a comprehensive, easy-to-read guide that answers these questions and many, many more all in a single location. 

Through 13 informative chapters, Teaching in a Digital Age: Guidelines for Teaching and Learning answers your questions and provides helpful guidance and suggestions on a host of topics including: 

  • How do I decide whether my courses should be campus-based, blended or fully online?
  • What strategies work best when teaching in a technology-rich environment? What methods of teaching are most effective for blended and online classes?
  • How do I make choices among all the available media, whether text, audio, video, computer, or social media, in order to benefit my students and my subject?
  • How do I assess the educational value of emerging technologies as they evolve?
  • How do I maintain quality of teaching, learning, and resources in a rapidly changing learning environment?
  • What are the real possibilities for teaching and learning using MOOCs, OERs, open textbooks?

While understanding and respecting the individual nature of teaching, Tony talks theory, options, best practices, point-by-point strategies - offering clear, practical, and actionable advice and guidance based on research and extensive professional experience in 30 countries. The second edition includes more recent research, and sections on open pedagogy and emerging technologies, plus more activities and feedback for readers or students using the book.

Pick one chapter or read them all – you will find a wealth of information at your fingertips.

Teaching in a Digital Age: Guidelines for Teaching and Learning [Second Edition] is available as a free, online open textbook, which you can read online, download to your tablet or computer, or print, either in sections or as a whole.

READ

Clicking READ opens a PDF version of Teaching in a Digital Age: 2nd Edition

 

The first edition of Teaching in a Digital Age: Guidelines for Teaching and Learning is available here in English and French

  

 

THE 10 FUNDAMENTALS OF TEACHING FOR FACULTY AND INSTRUCTORS

Newcomers or Experienced in Online Learning

By Contact North | Contact Nord Research Associate, Dr. Tony Bates

Interested in what works and what does not work in online learning?
Want to know the basics to save time and develop better courses from scratch?
Keen to ground your teaching in the latest research on online learning? 
 
Contact North | Contact Nord's Research Associate, Dr. Tony Bates, provides a succinct introduction to faculty and instructors about whether or not to get involved in online teaching in the first place. And how to do it well. 
 
These ten short guides are drawn from his 517-page bestseller, Teaching in a Digital Age, which has over 40,000 downloads as an open textbook and is available in seven languages. 
 
Dr. Bates draws from his 40 years' experience in teaching online and at a distance, best practices from around the world and extensive research in online learning. 
 
Download The 10 Fundamentals of Teaching Online for Faculty and Instructors.

Contents

Scenario A: A university professor addresses change

About the book – and how to use it

About the author

Other books by the author

Updates and revisions

 

Chapter 1: Fundamental Change in Education

1.1 Structural changes in the economy: the growth of a knowledge society

1.2 The skills needed in a digital age

1.3 Should education be tied directly to the labour market?

1.4 Change and continuity

1.5 The impact of expansion on teaching methods

1.6 Changing students, changing markets for higher education

1.7 From the periphery to the center: how technology is changing the way we teach

1.8 Navigating new developments in technology and online learning

 

Chapter 2: The nature of knowledge and the implications for teaching

Scenario B: A pre-dinner party discussion

2.1 Art, theory, research, and best practices in teaching

2.2 Epistemology and theories of learning

2.3 Objectivism and behaviourism

2.4 Cognitivism

2.5 Constructivism

2.6 Connectivism

2.7 Is the nature of knowledge changing?

2.8 Summary

 

Chapter 3: Methods of teaching: campus-focused

Scenario C: A stats lecturer fights the system

3.1 Five perspectives on teaching

3.2 The origins of the classroom design model

3.3 Transmissive lectures: learning by listening

3.4 Interactive lectures, seminars, and tutorials: learning by talking

3.5 Learning by doing: Experiential learning

3.6 Learning by doing: Apprenticeship

3.7 Learning by being: The nurturing and social reform models of teaching:

3.8 Main conclusions

 

Chapter 4: Methods of teaching with an online focus

Scenario D: Developing historical thinking

4.1 Online learning and teaching methods

4.2 Old wine in new bottles: classroom-type online learning

4.3 The ADDIE model

4.4 Online collaborative learning

4.5 Competency-based learning

4.6 Communities of practice

Scenario E: ETEC 522: Ventures in e-Learning

4.7 ‘Agile’ Design: flexible designs for learning

4.8 Making decisions about teaching methods

 

Chapter 5: MOOCs

5.1 Brief history

5.2 What is a MOOC?

5.3 A Taxonomy of MOOCs

5.4 Strengths and weaknesses of MOOCs

5.5 Political, social and economic drivers of MOOCs

5.6 Why MOOCs are only part of the answer

Scenario F: How to cope with being old

 

Chapter 6: Building an effective learning environment

6.1 Integrating design principles within a rich learning environment

6.2 What is a learning environment?

6.3 Learner characteristics

6.4 Managing content

6.5 Developing skills

6.6 Learner support

6.7 Resources

6.8 Assessment of learning

6.9 Culture and learning environments

6.10 Conclusions

 

Chapter 7: Understanding technology in education

7.1 Choosing technologies for teaching and learning: the challenge

7.2 A short history of educational technology

7.3 Media or technology?

7.4 Assessing media affordances: the SAMR model

7.5 Broadcast vs communicative media

7.6 The time and space dimensions of media

7.7 Media richness

7.8 Understanding the foundations of educational media

 

Chapter 8: Pedagogical differences between media

8.1 Thinking about the pedagogical differences of media

8.2 Text

8.3 Audio

8.4 Video

8.5 Computing

8.6 Social media

8.7.a Emerging technologies: serious games and gamification

8.7.b. Emerging technologies: virtual and augmented reality

8.7c Emerging technologies: artificial intelligence

8.7.d Emerging technologies: conclusion and summary

8.8 A framework for analysing the pedagogical characteristics of educational media

 

Chapter 9: Choosing and using media in education: the SECTIONS model

9.1 Models for media selection

9.2 Students

9.3 Ease of Use

9.4 Cost

9.5 Teaching and media selection

9.6 Interaction

9.7 Organisational issues

9.8 Networking (and novelty)

9.9 Security and privacy

9.10 Deciding

 

Chapter 10: Modes of delivery

10.1 The continuum of technology-based learning

10.2 Comparing modes of delivery

10.3 Which mode? Student needs

10.4 Choosing between face-to-face and online teaching on campus

10.5 The future of the campus

 

Chapter 11: Trends in open education

Scenario H: Watershed management

11.1 Open learning

11.2 Open educational resources (OER)

11.3 Open textbooks, open research and open data

11.4 Open pedagogy

11.5 The implications of ‘open’ for course and program design: towards a paradigm shift?

 

Chapter 12: Ensuring quality teaching in a digital age

12.1 What do we mean by quality when teaching in a digital age?

12.2 Nine steps to quality teaching in a digital age

12.3 Step One: Decide how you want to teach

12.4 Step two: what kind of course or program?

12.5 Step three: work in a team

12.6 Step four: build on existing resources

12.7 Step five: master the technology

12.8 Step six: set appropriate learning goals

12.9 Step seven: design course structure and learning activities

12.10 Step eight: communicate, communicate, communicate

12.11 Step nine: evaluate and innovate

12.12  Building a strong foundation of course design

 

Chapter 13: Supporting teachers and instructors in a digital age

13.1 Are you a super-hero?

13.2 The development and training of teachers and instructors in a digital age

13.3 Learning technology support

13.4 Conditions of employment

13.5 Team teaching

13.6 An institutional strategy for teaching in a digital age

13.7 Building the future

Scenario I: Stopping the flu

Appendix 1: Questions to guide media selection and use

S: Who are your students?

E: Ease of use

C: What is the cost in money and time?

T: Teaching and other pedagogical factors

I: Interaction

O: Organisational issues

N: Networking

S: Security and privacy

 

     Appendix 2 Online learning quality standards, organisations and research

 

     Appendix 3: Independent reviews  

A review from a faculty perspective: Professor James Mitchell

A review from an open and distance education perspective: Sir John Daniel

A review from a digital education perspective: Digital Education Strategies, Ryerson University

MERLOT II Peer Review

 

Feedback on Activities

Appendix 4: Feedback on Activity 1.8 Main conclusions from Chapter 1

Appendix 4: Feedback on Activity 7.1 How many technologies can you see in Figure 7.1?

Appendix 4: Feedback on Activity 7.5 Broadcast or communicative

 

Bibliography

Index

 

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Provincial Land Acknowledgement

Contact North | Contact Nord respectfully acknowledges that our work, and the work of our community partners, takes place on traditional Indigenous territories across the province.

We are grateful to be able to work and live in these territories. We are thankful to the First Nations, Métis and Inuit people who have cared for these territories since time immemorial and who continue to strengthen Ontario and all communities across the province.

 

Contact North | Contact Nord is a not-for-profit corporation funded by the Government of Ontario.

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