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Anon
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« Reply #1 on: February 06, 2004, 07:39:29 AM » |
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You might consider simply enrolling in a community-college distance-education course, analyzing how it's set up, then creating a course plan/syllabus that would conform to distance-education requirements. Also, investigate two major distance-education platforms: BlackBoard and WebCT, which a lot of the community colleges use.
Types and contents of distance-education courses vary broadly. Some courses are fairly simple in design, such that they could even be completed via correspondence (as some actually are); others are much more complicated, requiring participation in chatrooms, bulletin boards, responses to other students' postings, group assignments via e-mail and instant messaging, log-ins to external sites with monitored exercises, etc.
Some instructors and administrators confuse utilization of various electronic modalities with effective instruction. The extent to which this confusion occurs, and the type of distance-education courses you will be required to design, ultimately will depend on the particular institution at which you are employed. Hence, if you have some familiarity with distance-education courses, and can lay claim to having designed materials for such courses, you will be able to adapt your experience to that of the particular institution, which will most likely provide its own training and software support.
I would hesitate to spend too much time or money becoming expert in one particular type of distance education, or one particular software program, which might not be utilized at the institution where you are ultimately employed.
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