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by William W. Lee
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Trends and Issues in Instructional Design and Technology (2nd Edition) by Robert Reiser |
Communication is fundamental to any teaching endeavor. Ideally, collaboration joins effective communication to create effective learning environments. This is true whether the learning space is brick and mortar or virtual. Patricia Comeaux, et. al., suggest that in order to achieve the benefits that technology can offer for teaching and learning, we need to understand the communication issues that technology surfaces in human interaction. This compilation of experiences with technology in teaching and learning has, as a focus, communication and collaboration. Collaboration is one area of interaction where communication and technology issues intersect the preparation to teach, the act of teaching and the evaluation of teaching and learning effectiveness. It is in these areas that the authors describe their experiences in the context of communication theories.
The authors share challenges, benefits and lessons learned from developing programs, creating and teaching courses, and teaching as visiting faculty. The purpose is to provide faculty, graduate students, administrators, and scholars in higher education with real experiences across disciplines. One of the strengths of the book is the wide span of experience and disciplines that have come together to share their stories and analysis of those experiences.
Comeaux begins the text with a brief review of the literature relevant to communication, education, instructional technology, and distance education related to communication and collaboration via interactive technology. The contributing authors responded to the following question in each chapter: "how have interactive technologies affected teaching and learning in institutions of higher education?" Dividing the chapters into three sections, authors first address program development. Case studies offer insights gained from collaborating within departments and with key stakeholders in the community. Issues such as managing detractors, facilitating effective project management, and creating dialogues around teaching and learning are explored.
The second section focuses on collaboration in course design and teaching as visiting faculty in online courses. Benefits of collaboration as visiting faculty are described and demonstrate the value of interactive technologies in enhancing the learning environment through opportunities like providing content and experiences that the primary course faculty do not have access to. Collaboration in preparing for course content and teaching strategies is seen as paying big dividends even though navigation and negotiation via unfamiliar or, sometimes, unavailable technology was problematic.
Lastly, the third section deals with the development of learning communities. In a sense, the last section brings together the essence of communication and collaboration as faculty worked to create cohesive learning communities using interactive technologies. Practical issues like sizes of groups, availability of resources, and time management are explored. Interestingly, these are the same fundamental issues in face-to-face environments. Effective teamwork aimed at a common objective seemed to create similar challenges for this set of faculty. The lessons learned in this section provide a rich source of areas to focus on proactively by anyone attempting to create online learning communities.
In the final chapter, Comeaux argues that the authors supported and extended the themes identified in the Introduction; dialogues about teaching and learning with interactive technologies are increasing and being supported by key stakeholders in the teaching-learning community; teaching is "a complex communicative process"; collaborative learning occurs in both traditional and online classrooms; and collaborative learning is a viable approach in interactive environments. She notes that as we gain experiences in online or virtual environments our language will better reflect the key foci for understanding teaching and learning and that it will, in all likelihood, not be on the particular space where instruction occurs. Rather, the focus will be, as this book has demonstrated, on communication and collaboration between all of the players in the teaching-learning environment.
This book adds to our understanding of teaching via interactive technologies by providing faculty experiences that they have analyzed for risks and benefits in developing, providing and evaluating teaching via interactive technologies. For faculty developers, the cases can provide starting points for faculty or groups of faculty and administrators interested in using interactive technologies. For those interested in the use of interactive technologies framed within the context of communication and collaboration, the cases and faculty experiences provide a means of surfacing, exploring, validating their assumptions and experiences in online environments.
I found the book to be an interesting read. Practically speaking, the case studies are relatively short and organized in a way that it was easy to follow the case description and subsequent analysis. The breadth of faculty experience and expertise provided a rounded view of some of the challenges that faculty face at different times in their own growth and development as teachers.
I would recommend the book to faculty, administrators and faculty developers as a useful starting place for exploring how they use the notions of communication and collaboration in their classrooms. (UNC's Effective Teaching web site, September 2002)
Drawing from a wide range of disciplines, the contributors describe and analyze their experiences in collaboration and in using interactive technologies. The multidisciplinary approach of this book is valuable to anyone interested in pedagogical applications of interactive technologies across disciplines and institutions.
Contents include:
Introduction: Collaboration, communication, teaching, and learning: A theoretical foundation and frame
by Patricia Comeaux, University of North CarolinaWilmington
Developing an MBA online degree program
by Richard G. Milter, Ohio University
Collaborative instructional design for an Internet-based graduate degree program
by Mary Anne Nixon and Beth Rodgers Leftwich, Western Carolina University
Degrees and programs by distance education
by Frank Fuller, Ronald McBride, and Robert Gillan, Northwestern State University
The impact of culture on the design and implementation of a distance education program
by Richard Olsen, University of North CarolinaWilmington and Robert Schihl, Regent University
Virtual visiting professors: Communicative, pedagogical, and technological collaboration
by Scott A. Chadwick, Iowa State University and Tracy Callaway Russo, University of Kansas
Intrapersonal communication, interpersonal communication, and computer-mediated communication
by Leonard J. Shedletsky, University of Southern Maine and Joan E. Aitken, University of Missouri, Kansas City
Collaborating on the instructional design and implementation of an environmental education course
by Richard Huber, University of North CarolinaWilmington
Linking two diversity and communication courses through interactive television
by Deborah Brunson, University of North CarolinaWilmington and Nina-Jo Moore, Appalachian State University
Camera presentation perspectives and techniques in an interactive audio/video instructional environment
by Frank P. Trimble, University of North CarolinaWilmington
Creating a collaborative computer-mediated communication culture
by Mary E. Wildner-Bassett, University of Arizona
Designing and implementing an interactive online learning environment
by Mahnaz Moallem, University of North CarolinaWilmington
Communicating: The key to success in an online writing and reading course
by Ele Byington, University of North CarolinaWilmington
Fostering intellectual development in a learning community
by Mary Bozik and Karen Tracey, University of Northern Iowa
Building a communications learning community
by Patricia Worrall and Brian Kline, Gainesville College
Conclusion: Teaching and learning with interactive technologies: What have we learned and where are we going?
by Patricia Comeaux, University of North CarolinaWilmington
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