Content Delivery and Logistics

Determining how you will develop and deliver your content is considered more time-consuming than developing a face-to-face course. Therefore, Nagel and Kotze (2010) strongly recommend that faculty create an organized course with explicit detail and expectations thus laying the foundation for your teaching presence. The following strategies will help you save time and maintain an orderly and organized online course.

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Setting Up Your Course

Every semester you need to create a new course shell to house that semester's students and class content. Before you can request a course account, you need to ensure that your course is listed in the <Replace - Institution Name> course schedule and that you are listed as the instructor of record (you cannot request a course account if you are not listed as the instructor of record). If your students are unable to register for your course, you will need to contact your department scheduler. Once the course is available on MyUCF, you must request your course through the Faculty Webcourse Manager. Instructions are provided on the Start of Semester Checklist. 

Keep in mind that the Semester Checklist is an incredibly useful document as it contains a variety of information that will help you get your courses ready for your students ( e.g., you can link multiple sections of the same course together so that you only have to manage one course).

As you have learned throughout <Replace - Course Title>, <Replace - Department Name> has created several templates to assist you with creating your online course.  To add the templates to another course, please contact <Replace - Your LMS Support Team>.

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The Course Time Line

As with your face-to-face class, your online course will have an ebb and flow. It may be hard to predict exactly how your course will run when you first teach it. Follow the suggestions below to help minimize potential issues that may arise:

Before the Course Starts

First Week of Course

  • Publish your course Links to an external site..  Student's won't be able to access your course until you publish the course.
  • Establish a weekly course routine for yourself and your students. Consistency will ensure that students will know how to access the course content and complete assignments on time. Another consideration is to have all of your assignments due on the same date and time throughout the semester.
  • Use Course Statistics  Links to an external site.to see which students have logged into your course.

During the Course

  • Use Announcements or Conversations to alert your students of any changes to the course.
  • Use Learning Analytics Links to an external site. and the Access Report Links to an external site. to monitor student performance 
  • When a student has a question related to the course, chances are good that other students have the same question. Therefore, it is recommended that you share the answers with all of your students. Choose any of the following options to alert your students of the answer(s):
    • Use the Announcement tool
    • Create a discussion topic called Ask the Professor
    • Send a message to all students via conversations.

End of Course

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Optional Further Reading

References

  • Coppola, N. W., Hiltz, S. R., and Rotter, N. G. (2004) Building Trust in Virtual Teams. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, (June), 95-104.
  • Nagel, L., & Kotzé, T. (2010). Supersizing e-learning: What a CoI survey reveals about teaching presence in a large online class.  Internet & Higher Education,  13 (1/2), 45-51. doi:10.1016/j.iheduc.2009.12.001.

Creative Commons License

TOPKit Sample Course was prepared by the University of Central Florida (UCF). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License Links to an external site..