Learning Activities for Asynchronous Online Classes
Asynchronous online classes offer students more flexibility and reduce access challenges, although large files such as streaming video can still present . You can help students succeed in asynchronous courses through careful course design, including building a community of inquiry that includes cognitive presence, instructor presence, and social presence.
Since building a community of inquiry is important to student success in asynchronous courses, these courses can especially benefit from a constructivist approach, which focuses on students constructing their understanding of content together. For more information on the constructive approach you can also see from The Complete Step-by-Step Guide to Designing and Teaching Online Courses and Cornell University’s .
Asynchronous active learning can take many forms, including:
- Quizzes, a form of that can include
- Discussion boards
Course content can come from different sources and be delivered in different formats. You can locate relevant content created by others from a variety of sources, including the .
can be particularly useful in online education and encompasses not just open education resources (OER: freely available content), but also other aspects of openness such as collaborative construction of materials as part of a course. Open pedagogy is supported by such as Kim Hoffman, who has co-edited .
STEM instructors can consult this developed by the POD Network.
Discussion Boards
Discussion boards are a central learning activity in many asynchronous courses, and they can allow students to interact using a variety of media, including text, images, audio, and video. Discussion board software options have different strengths, and the ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é provides access to a range of choices.
When setting up a discussion board, you will need to make a number of choices about how to structure and manage student interactions. The following resources address key areas:
: This primer on discussion board basics is especially helpful in explaining how to write good questions, but covers everything from post timing and duration of each board to ways to wrap up online discussions.
: This presentation and accompanying handout reviews a wide range of types of discussion board activities, including case studies, debates, and challenge questions.
: Constructed specifically around the community of inquiry framework, these four short chapters are full of options, practical tips, and structured aids such as rubrics. In particular, the chapter on instructor presence offers an overview of productive ways for instructors to engage in discussion boards such as weaving, implications, inferences, and summaries.
: Using a lens of meaningful learning, this book offers online learning activities categorized by supportive, dialogic, and exploratory options.
Videos
Another way to deliver course content is to create videos. Best practices suggest that these should be short (less than six minutes) to increase student engagement and reduce cognitive load, so consider chunking your lecture material accordingly. To get started, try consulting the following:
: This two-and-a-half minute micro-lecture by Michael Wesch explains micro-lectures, and Wesch has a .
: Learn about the basics of screencasting, which combines instructor audio with screen content from a computer.
: This longer webpage goes through the research to make evidence-based suggestions about how to use videos to teach and has several convenient summary graphics.
Education Technology Tools
Asynchronous learning activities can benefit from a seemingly endless array of tools. When selecting your tools, consider carefully how many tools you are introducing. While students will likely use common tools such as Blackboard, Zoom, and Panopto in many of their courses, student time investments will get increasingly steep if each of their instructors introduces a large number of additional tools. Also consider whether a particular tool has been vetted by the ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é for security and privacy issues, particularly if the tool requires students to set up an account. AS&E Instructional Technology maintains a list of vetted tools.
Each time you use a new tool in a course, you will need to teach students how to use it. An easy way to do that is to embed a link to a video tutorial at the location where the student is expected to use the tool. Many software providers offer these video tutorials on their website or YouTube channel. Offer students a low-stakes introduction to any tool that will be used for a graded assessment later in the course.
To locate tools that will work for you and tutorials on their use, consult the following resources:
- Teaching During Times of Disruption, Online Learning at the ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é
- Instructional Technology Tools, Online Learning at the ÂÒÂ×Ç¿¼é
- Educational Technology Tools, AS&E Instructional Technology
If you have questions about how to select and use software (tools), contact AS&E Instructional Technology. If you have questions about how to teach (pedagogy), contact the Teaching Center.