Thursday, May 12, 2016

Final Project

So happy smiling cat 
By Yumi Kimura from Yokohama, JAPAN (so happy smiling cat) [CC BY-SA 2.0 
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Wow. This has been a quick four weeks. I think that I really need some time to marinate, but deadlines are deadlines.Right now, I feel like the smiling cat. I made it through!

Here is my Final Project post.

Description of Environment
When I started this course, I had big ambitions. My initial goal was to design a 16-week, for-credit credit course that aligns with the student learning outcomes for Freshman Foundations, a form of FYE instruction. The course will be delivered face-to-face to between 25 and 30 students and meet twice a week for one hour and fifteen minutes per session. This new course will use team-teaching with two librarians sharing duties. Because this course must align with the student learning outcome set by the university, it will not be restricted to just library instruction, but will cross over into critical thinking and writing.
While this lofty goal will unfold over the next two months, for the purpose of this course, I had to scale back the scope to a single activity: the assessing authority exercise.

Learning Outcomes
 The current student learning outcome for Freshman Foundations is as follows: The student critically analyzes and communicates complex issues and ideas. Ideally, the course will incorporate the ACRL Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education as the underlying structure.
As the scope narrowed to a single activity, the original goals changed to be more in line with the single exercise: As a result of the authority module, 80% of the class will be able to recognize the difference between a credible authority that could be used in a college-level paper and a not so credible authority.

Assessment
This single activity will be formative as it is a low stakes exercise; however, the full-length course will be a combination of formative and summative assessment. Since the university requires a minimum of two summative assessments, a final project and a final exam, the formative assessments can be building blocks and can have more instructive feedback. The balance between the two will be a gateway to reaching the course outcomes.

Learning Theories
As I stated in my previous blog post, constructivism seems to be the best theory. For my activity on evaluating authority, taking a constructivist approach is the most viable. Students will be starting with a question, “which source is the most credible for a college-level paper,” and debate the merits of each of their example sources. The sources will not be identified as website, magazine article, or journal article. Instead, students will need to “discover their own truths” through using the evaluation worksheet. Although this activity is not as open-ended as one described in Cooperstein and Kocebar-Weideinger (2004), using a blind approach can allow students the same opportunity as ask increasingly complex questions about authority. After students have arranged their sources in a credibility hierarchy, the entire class can have an open discussion about the order and the underlying reasons why sources were ranked ion that order.
This activity would meet the aspects of constructivist lessons explained in Good and Brophy (as cited in Cooperstein & Kocebar-Weidinger, 2004, p. 142). Allowing students to create their own hierarchy allows them to construct meaning. In addition, the hierarchy will build upon what they already know about source evaluation. Since this is a group activity, social interaction will enhance the experience. Finally, defining the hierarchy as the order that students would place their sources according to credibility mimics the real-world experience that they have whenever they are tasked with writing a paper.

Tools
For the overall course, some delivery tools will be used. For example, students will be posting to a blog in Blackboard. In terms of content, I have already selected several TED Talks to use as discussion starts. I also plan on using a Google Hangout for students to use during class discussion. This will serve as a record of the day’s discussion as well as allowing students who may be reluctant to speak in class the opportunity to have their voices heard.
After reviewing my learning goal for the authority exercise--As a result of the authority module, 80% of the class will be able to recognize the difference between a credible authority that could be used in a college-level paper and a not so credible authority--I realized that the first part of the exercise will be completely old school, no tech. Students will have paper copies of three different types of sources: a website, a magazine article, and a journal article. This is a group exercise, so students will get an opportunity to discuss. Once they have created a hierarchy based on only the paper materials, they can then use their computers (moving into standard tech) to see how their initial hierarchy compares to the reality of the source authority. At this point, they can revert to their comfort level of digital searching.

Time to Reflect
Taking this class allowed me to take a step back and re-evaluate the courses that I currently teach. Although I didn’t follow the concept of backward design, somehow, my courses ended up in the right place. I do see how this process can help beginning instructors, and I do think that I will follow the steps that we’ve covered as I create the Freshman Foundations course. I had already designed the rough outline of for what and when, so I will be curious to see if using the concepts we learned actually makes a difference from the process that I have used in the past.

Classmates’ Blogs
I haven’t followed one blog from beginning to end due to time constraints. Instead, I have jumped from blog to blog, reading posts that sounded interesting. There are bits and pieces that I found helpful. I enjoyed Michelle DeMars’ blog, Kathy Anderson’s blog, and Amanda Starkel’s blog. I apologize to those classmates whose blogs I did not have a chance to read.




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