Thanks to
Esperanza I was alerted to the article
I'll Never Do It Again - Chronicle.com. Thanks to
Gabriela Grosseck the link to that article was retwitted several times. In this article Elayne Clift, a lecturer at various colleges and universities complains about online teaching:
- too much work
- difficult to communicate with people for whom she has no face, no persona, no body language, no in-the-moment exchange.
- the lack of immediacy in communication
- couldn't keep up with all the posts, replies, planning, announcements, tracking, grading, and so on unless she visited the increasingly dreaded Blackboard almost every day.
- all the e-mail messages that she received from students
She wrote "couldn't keep up with all the posts, replies, planning, announcements, tracking, grading, and so on unless I visited the increasingly dreaded Blackboard almost every day"
Aren't online teachers complicating themselves. At the face to face classes there is nothing similar to forum discussions. So the the discussions between the students should be very important for their grade!! They should be allowed to help each other and the teacher's role is to point them to good resources and to support and facilitate the discussions and learning. If the homework is a collaborative paper each student should be responsible to contribute with some paragraphs (
Michael Wesch: A Cultural Anthropologist Looks at Digital Technolog...) presentation.
The post
Leading Horses: notes on helping, failing and peeking from
Lisa M Lane is also related to this topic.
I would like to know what do you think and would appreciate your contribution to this thread. How can we make online teaching easier to manage?