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147 Practical Tips for Teaching Online Groups : Essentials of Web-Based Education

147 Practical Tips for Teaching Online Groups : Essentials of Web-Based Education

List Price: $12.50
Your Price: $10.62
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Waiting for no. 148
Review: "In an interactive online course, some content and methods work better than others." (p.32) Yes, I know this. That's why I bought this book. Do I have to wait for the sequel to actually find out *which* content and methods work better than others?

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Waiting for no. 148
Review: "In an interactive online course, some content and methods work better than others." (p.32) Yes, I know this. That's why I bought this book. Do I have to wait for the sequel to actually find out *which* content and methods work better than others?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Just what professors need to jump into online learning...
Review: 147 Practical Tips for Teaching Online Groups delivers what the title implies and much, much more. Over the last three years I have traveled to scores of universities across the United States and talked to chancellors, presidents, provosts, deans, and faculty about technology in education. Online education is on everyone's mind. Most faculty members are very un-nerved and yet intrigued by the idea of exploring this new mode of publishing and. So many faculty I have visited with from all academic fields are holding back, unsure of where to step into this seeming ocean of unknown waters. 147 Practical Tips for Teaching Online is the PERFECT book to start faculty off on this new adventure. If I were a dean wondering how to start a discussion with faculty about exploring online education, I would purchase everyone a copy.

This book provides a practical road map, warns of the potholes to avoid, asks readers to think about important questions they will face along the way, and illuminates the myths about teaching online. It is written in a gentle yet affirming tone that lets the reader evaluate from her/his own experience, how he/she might jump into this new medium of information and discourse.

Professors will make the decision to adopt new ways of teaching and learning when they hear about it from another professor, from a colleague who has been there before and can show them some of the journey they will encounter. This book takes nothing for granted about what an instructor may or may not know about effective teaching. It gives a reasonable and detailed series of guideposts that even the best instructors can appreciate in planning their own first adventure into online education.

I recommend this book even for experienced distance educators as I learned a great deal from it myself. I wish I could have had this book when I jumped into distance education 13 years ago.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Just what professors need to jump into online learning...
Review: 147 Practical Tips for Teaching Online Groups delivers what the title implies and much, much more. Over the last three years I have traveled to scores of universities across the United States and talked to chancellors, presidents, provosts, deans, and faculty about technology in education. Online education is on everyone's mind. Most faculty members are very un-nerved and yet intrigued by the idea of exploring this new mode of publishing and. So many faculty I have visited with from all academic fields are holding back, unsure of where to step into this seeming ocean of unknown waters. 147 Practical Tips for Teaching Online is the PERFECT book to start faculty off on this new adventure. If I were a dean wondering how to start a discussion with faculty about exploring online education, I would purchase everyone a copy.

This book provides a practical road map, warns of the potholes to avoid, asks readers to think about important questions they will face along the way, and illuminates the myths about teaching online. It is written in a gentle yet affirming tone that lets the reader evaluate from her/his own experience, how he/she might jump into this new medium of information and discourse.

Professors will make the decision to adopt new ways of teaching and learning when they hear about it from another professor, from a colleague who has been there before and can show them some of the journey they will encounter. This book takes nothing for granted about what an instructor may or may not know about effective teaching. It gives a reasonable and detailed series of guideposts that even the best instructors can appreciate in planning their own first adventure into online education.

I recommend this book even for experienced distance educators as I learned a great deal from it myself. I wish I could have had this book when I jumped into distance education 13 years ago.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Just In Time Learning for the Just In Time Learning Movement
Review: As an experienced learner and instructor in online education, I found this book to be a nice, quick read that provides some very practical tips and suggstions in teaching online. What I really liked about it was its simplicity-finally, a book that reads like a book and not like an academic journal article. ( I like academic journal articles, but when I read them all day, this is a nice change of pace.)

Not meant to be a comprehensive resource nor the final solution to online teaching problems, these tips generate intrigue and interest-enough to encourage you to explore additonal resources.

A great road map for beginners and for seasoned veterans in online education.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Just In Time Learning for the Just In Time Learning Movement
Review: As an experienced learner and instructor in online education, I found this book to be a nice, quick read that provides some very practical tips and suggstions in teaching online. What I really liked about it was its simplicity-finally, a book that reads like a book and not like an academic journal article. ( I like academic journal articles, but when I read them all day, this is a nice change of pace.)

Not meant to be a comprehensive resource nor the final solution to online teaching problems, these tips generate intrigue and interest-enough to encourage you to explore additonal resources.

A great road map for beginners and for seasoned veterans in online education.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Checklist for Flight Takeoff
Review: As the Bard said, "ripeness is all." If you are ready for a 65-page checklist about online teaching, and if you are hungry for a succinct set of reminders in four chapters with two short appendices of helpful websites-- here it is. You can read this in a couple of hours, as I did, and get a satisfying overview. I'm going back to it for the occasional reality check, like chatting to an experienced and non-threatening colleague, when I need a few calming words. The extended essay 147 Tips will be for some people, such as myself, a reassurance that the "black hole" of Virtual Learning Environments (VLE) will not devour me totally. The four things I liked best about this slim volume are (1) an emphasis on knowing yourself and your philosophy of teaching, (2) itemisation of most common myths and constraints of online instruction, (3) lots of practical reminders (don't expect revolutionary or stunning) about content and assessment, and finally (4) a sense of "go ahead, you can do it" attitude. The three authors first share their medieval self-profiles (I'm not joking!), so that you can see they are real people trying their best to figure out how to be responsible pioneers. No big words. But if you are not "ripe" for this kind of "guide on the side" type of humane encouragement, I expect you'll be frustrated. This extended outline of 147 "tips"-- a bit of a misnomer-- is for people who want a point-form set of reminders. It is a sequential shoppling list of topics. It leaves one with a sense of modest suggestions offered by caring educators.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Checklist for Flight Takeoff
Review: As the Bard said, "ripeness is all." If you are ready for a 65-page checklist about online teaching, and if you are hungry for a succinct set of reminders in four chapters with two short appendices of helpful websites-- here it is. You can read this in a couple of hours, as I did, and get a satisfying overview. I'm going back to it for the occasional reality check, like chatting to an experienced and non-threatening colleague, when I need a few calming words. The extended essay 147 Tips will be for some people, such as myself, a reassurance that the "black hole" of Virtual Learning Environments (VLE) will not devour me totally. The four things I liked best about this slim volume are (1) an emphasis on knowing yourself and your philosophy of teaching, (2) itemisation of most common myths and constraints of online instruction, (3) lots of practical reminders (don't expect revolutionary or stunning) about content and assessment, and finally (4) a sense of "go ahead, you can do it" attitude. The three authors first share their medieval self-profiles (I'm not joking!), so that you can see they are real people trying their best to figure out how to be responsible pioneers. No big words. But if you are not "ripe" for this kind of "guide on the side" type of humane encouragement, I expect you'll be frustrated. This extended outline of 147 "tips"-- a bit of a misnomer-- is for people who want a point-form set of reminders. It is a sequential shoppling list of topics. It leaves one with a sense of modest suggestions offered by caring educators.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not exactly what I had expected....
Review: If you are looking for specific distance education methodologies and techniques you might want to look elsewhere, but if all you are looking for are general distance education concepts put into a book- then this is for you. I thought that the tips were similar to something you might get in a "Thought of the Day" email, some interesting concepts with very little substance.

The book does have some very good ideas and the structure of the book allows you to quickly browse through the tips if you are looking for new ideas or affirmation of something that you are currently doing. The 4 chapters present the tips in a logical framework of ideas to help you find something, even if you're not quite sure what it is you are looking for:
Chapter 1. Before You Begin
Chapter 2. Myths and Constraints of Online Teaching and Learning
Chapter 3. Organizing the Online Course
Chapter 4. Beginning Instruction in the Online Course: Implementing the Course Design

The fact that they don't go into specific technologies very much also facilitates the tips being useful across a wider variety of technologies.

I would recommend this book for someone new to the field of distance education looking to get a handle on general concepts, but for anyone who has been around the block this book is only going to tell you what you already know.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Each technique is succinctly presented
Review: In 147 Practical Tips For Teaching Online Groups: Essentials of Web-Based Education, Donald E. Hanna, Michelle Glowacki-Dudka, and Simone Conceicao-Runlee effectively collaborate to create a practical and succinct compendium of "tips, tricks and techniques" for successfully conducting a workshop, seminar or classroom symposium over the Internet. Each technique is succinctly presented and will increase effectiveness for both the teacher and the group discussion participants. 147 Practical Tips For Teaching Online Groups is essential and invaluable reading for anyone charged with the responsibility for using the Internet as a means of instructional contact whether in academia, a corporate in-service, non-profit organizational seminar, or educating an Internet newsgroup or listserv in some particular subject, issue or topic.


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