Saturday 9 August 2014

Meaningful Interaction in Online Courses

by Nate Sleeter, Inside Higher Ed


Critics of online education, especially in the humanities, often stress the importance of face-to-face interaction. It is face-to-face interaction, the reasoning goes, that makes traditional in-person courses superior to their online counterparts. Without rejecting the premise, it nevertheless seems counterproductive to think of in-person courses and online courses in strictly competitive terms. If online courses are here to stay and we in the humanities are expected to teach them, these vigorous defenses of the in-person course will not make us better online instructors. In other words if we want to make online courses better, then it seems crucial to think about how we can promote “interaction” when “face-to-face” is not an option.


http://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/higher-ed-beta/meaningful-interaction-online-courses


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from Educational Technology http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/uis/edtech/~3/473ofG-LH8I/

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