4.2 Interactive Lecture (30-45 mins)

Listen to a lecture and compile questions

PURPOSE OF THE TASK: The assigned interactive lecture introduces to you the meaning of learner-centered course design and makes mention of the implications for your development and facilitation of online courses.

TECHNOLOGY: For this task you will be accessing a lecture presentation which has been created with the OER software H5P, a community driven open-software development project that backed by the H5P Core Team in Tromsø, Norway. As past of the lecture, you will need to respond by answering the embedded questions. The presentation contains audio files as well as pictures and links to original academic references. Any content created with H5P can be shared with others with specific permissions if desired.

INSTRUCTIONS: 

STEP 1: Access the lecture by clicking on the picture below and then listen to its components. You will need to move in between the slides by navigating as indicated below. Make sure to answer the embedded quizzing questions, which you can check within the respective slides. DUE by Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2019 before midnight.

STEP 2:  What questions have popped up in your mind while listening to the lecture components? Write down at least one of them and share it with us on this EtherpadWrite your name next to your question(s). You don’t need to sign up for an account, but can make additions instantly by hitting the anonymous button on the top right before starting to post. DUE by Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2019 at midnight.


TEACHING INTENTIONS: Interactive lectures incorporate engagement triggers that break the lecture into shorter segments. Not only do interactive lectures consider attention spans, but they also require students to work with the information they have just taken in by having to answer questions or think deeper about issues that were mentioned. There are various ways in which interactivity can be embedded into lectures, some of which are outlined here.

References:

Carr‐Chellman, A., & Duchastel, P. (2000). The ideal online course. British Journal of Educational Technology, 31(3), 229–241. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-8535.00154
CENTER FOR TEACHING AND LEARNING. (n.d.). 10 Activities to Make Lectures Interactive. Retrieved October 10, 2019, from https://ctl.byu.edu/tip/10-activities-make-lectures-interactive
Mccombs, B. L., & Vakili, D. (2005). A Learner-Centered Framework for E-Learning.Teachers College Record, 107(8), 1582–1600.
O’Reilly, M., & Newton, D. (2002). Interaction online: Above and beyond requirements of assessment. https://doi.org/10.14742/ajet.1879
Weimer, M. (2002). Learner-Centered Teaching. Five Key Changes to Practice. Jossey Bass: San Francisco.

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FLOf - Facilitating Learning Online Copyright © 2019 by Kristi Thomas and Jördis Weilandt is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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