1st Edition

Online Education Global Questions, Local Answers

    342 Pages
    by Routledge

    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    In "Online Education: Global Questions, Local Answers", 24 college educators focus on the most important questions to be addressed by all scholar-teachers and administrators committed to developing high-quality online education programs. We describe these questions as "global" because they transcend the particular situations of individual institutions. They are questions that everyone involved in online education needs to address: What are the issues to consider when first developing and then sustaining an online education program? How do we create interactive, pedagogically sound online courses and classroom communities? How should we monitor and assess the quality of online courses and programs? And how should recent developments and innovations in online education cause us to reexamine our roles and responsibilities as educators in technical communication?While these global questions affect all of us in one way or another, they demand different local answers, such as those presented by the contributors to this text. Readers will need to consider which of these local answers might apply to their own situations and how these answers might need to be adapted to reflect the particular needs of their own institutions.

    Introduction

    SECTION 1: HOW DO WE CREATE AND SUSTAIN ONLINE PROGRAMS AND COURSES?

     CHAPTER 1
     Applying Technical Communication Theory to the Design of Online Education  Marjorie T. Davis

    CHAPTER 2
     Students in the Online Technical Communication Classroom Angela Eaton

    CHAPTER 3
     An Argument for Pedagogy-Driven Online Education Kelli Cargile Cook

    CHAPTER 4
     Strategic Planning for Online Education: Sustaining Students, Faculty, and Programs Carolyn Rude

    SECTION 2: HOW DO WE CREATE INTERACTIVE, PEDAGOGICALLY SOUND ONLINE COURSES AND CLASSROOM COMMUNITIES?

     CHAPTER 5
     Changing Roles for Online Teachers of Technical Communication Nancy W. Coppola

    CHAPTER 6
     Teaching Well Online with Instructional and Procedural Scaffolding Helen M. Grady and Marjorie T. Davis

    CHAPTER 7
     Mind the Gap(s): Modeling Space in Online Education Locke Carter and Rebecca Rickly

    CHAPTER 8
     Enhancing Online Collaboration: Virtual Peer Review in the Writing Classroom Lee-Ann Kastman Breuch

    CHAPTER 9
     Replicating and Extending Dialogic Aspects of the Graduate Seminar in Distance Education Susan Lang

    CHAPTER 10
     Paralogy and Online Pedagogy Mark Zachry

    SECTION 3: HOW SHOULD WE MONITOR AND ASSESS THE QUALITY OF ONLINE COURSES AND PROGRAMS?

     CHAPTER 11
     Students' Technological Difficulties in Using Web-Based Learning Environments Philip Rubens and Sherry Southard

    CHAPTER 12
     Activity Theory and the Online Technical Communication Course: Assessing Quality in Undergraduate Online Instruction Kristin Walker

    CHAPTER 13
     An Assignment Too Far: Reflecting Critically on Internships in an Online Master's Program Keith Grant-Davie

    CHAPTER 14
     Online Course and Instructor Evaluations Kelli Cargile Cook and Keith Grant-Davie

    CHAPTER 15
     Assessing Student Interaction in the Global Classroom Project: Visualizing Communication and Collaboration Patterns Using Online Transcripts Cassie Avery, Jason Civjan, and Aditya Johri

    SECTION 4: HOW IS ONLINE EDUCATION CHALLENGING OUR ASSUMPTIONS?

     CHAPTER 16
     The Global Classroom Project: Troublemaking and Troubleshooting TyAnna Herrington and Yuri Tretyakov

    CHAPTER 17
     Knowledge Politics: Open Sourcing Education Brenton Faber and Johndan Johnson-Eilola

    CHAPTER 18
     Extreme Pedagogies: When Technical Communication Vaults Institutional Barriers Billie J. Wahlstrom and Linda S. Clemens

     Contributors
     Index

    Biography

    Kelli Cargile Cook an d Keith Grant-Davie,