Monday, October 10, 2016

Our First Meeting

Word Cloud of Introductory Activity Responses

I felt nervous as the clock ticked its way to 2 pm. Who would show? Who wouldn't? I checked the chaffing dish of assorted hot vegetables-- tempura battered mushrooms, broccoli and zucchini, baked sweet potato wedges-- that Annie from Culinary Services had just delivered for us. I poured myself a small glass of ice water. In my mind, I ran through the list of people I'd invited to our gathering, taking the time to call up each person's face (a habit I've cultivated to humanize "likes" on social media), trying to imagine how they might be experiencing a Fall quarter Friday afternoon. I suspected some of us would be feeling more enthusiastic about an end of the day, end of the week meeting than others.

Alyssa and Mary from our Accessibility Department were the first to arrive. Alyssa, a calm, friendly person who will always laugh at your jokes, was happy to see the veggies. Mary, a warm and communicative student advocate and bridge-builder, investigated the identities of the mystery sauces that Annie brought for us. 

I thanked them for coming.

Marcia and Janell, two of my favorite BCIS faculty from the floor below, came in. Marcia, a truth-teller, shared a conversation she'd just had with another employee questioning the thinking of anyone who'd plan a meeting on a Friday afternoon. Janell, who is kind and makes excellent use of time, just smiled very broadly at me, so I knew she had some thoughts about Fridays, too. 

I thanked everybody for coming again.

Judi came in. I could tell she was thinking about something, she's always thinking, planning and working things out. A positive person, she says "yes" a lot. She tries new things, lots of new things. We follow each other on several social media sites, so I know she travels and hikes and lives with a beautiful dire wolf named Shiya. 

We all gathered around the tables in the eLearning Lab and chatted for ten or fifteen minutes, and then I thanked everyone again for coming. I pulled up the Canvas site that I'd structured for the FLC to use and shared the agenda for our gathering, explaining that I hoped to discuss the main points of our grant, give them a tour of the Canvas site, share a few resources, and pick some dates for future gatherings. 

agenda of meeting one

As we were looking at the over-arching questions from our grant documentation, ("What do we mean by student engagement, and how does it contribute to course completion and success in online environments? What characteristics of online course design, learning materials, activities, and technologies are most likely to create or discourage student engagement? What are best practices for creating accessible online learning materials and activities using technology?"), Jane joined us. She is the busy director of Library and Media Services, very wise, and laden with institutional knowledge. She is also my former supervisor of many years. I am certain we could finish many of each other's sentences without much effort.

I remembered that we hadn't yet done our group activity, Expectations: 

  • Tell us your name and describe your role here at BTC.
  • What do you expect from this faculty learning community?
  • Please make a wild prediction of the best possible outcome if your expectations for this group come true-- be specific-- and as outrageous as you like!


Here are the word clouds of our responses.








Here is the word cloud of all of our posts merged together:

Anita, our newest tenure track math teacher, who is efficient, precise, and working hard to figure out how our institution works, joined us after her last class, as the group discussed an upcoming webinar on designing engaging online discussions. I was very happy to see her. I think she will gain a lot from spending time with other faculty, and I think the group will benefit from her naturally great observations, as well as from the fresh perspectives she brings as a new employee.

Most of us are planning to register for an online QM class, Using Instructional Materials and Activities to Promote Learner Engagement, which begins on November 3rd. I'm looking forward to focusing on standards 4, 5 & 6, which are foundational to our FLC topic:

"how course design, materials, learner activities and course technologies affect student engagement and student success in online learning environments, using QM Standards 4 (Instructional Materials), 5 (Course Activities and Learner Interaction), 6 (Course Technology) and 8 (Usability and Accessibility) to frame our inquiry."

I feel very lucky to be working with this amazing group of people to build a community and to figure out how to make online learning better for our students. 




4 comments:

  1. Dawn, beautiful work on the word clouds! I think those really capture our expectations as we look forward to this exciting FLC project. Also, I like the tone that you took with this post--it models the webinar that we watched yesterday of engaging others through using your voice in writing (versus being overly technical). I am excited for this collaborative group!

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    1. They are the groups' words and the word cloud program's algorithms. I'm just the conduit! :) Thanks! I think this group is going to be the best part of my learning this year.

      I do think it's important to be your own human self online. This isn't always easy to do, though, especially if we need to communicate technical or complicated things.

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  2. Dawn must be planning to use this as a book or article with that much detail :)

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    1. Marcia, Or maybe you'd like to publish something... Feel free to reuse & remix! ;)

      https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/

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