Saturday, June 3, 2017

Summer Time and the Learning is Phenomenal!

Enroll Today: Free Registration 

Join US at UW-Stout Online This Phenomenal Summer!



Please share this information with teachers in your district.
  • Do you need extra credits to renew your license?
  • Are you interested in an additional certification? 
All of our math specialist, reading teacher, classroom management, educational technology, and courses for school library media specialists are offered online.

Online Course Descriptions

Start Date: June 12
EDUC 652 Universal Design for Learning
EDUC 642 Teaching Digital Media Literacy with Primary Sources
EDUC 645 School-wide Positive Behavioral Intervention and Support (PBIS)
EDUC 658 Issues in STEM Education
EDUC 661 Advanced Trends and Interventions in PK-5 Mathematics Teaching
EDUC 662 Leadership for Math Specialists
EDUC 664 Teaching K-12 Coding and Computational Thinking


Start Date: June 19
EDUC 640 Poverty in the Schools
EDUC 651 Project-based Learning in the Flipped Classroom
EDUC 656 Bullying In Schools


Start Date: June 26
EDUC 653 Middle School Through Adult Writing Instruction
EDUC 654 PK Through Elementary Writing Instruction
EDUC 761 Creating Collaborative Communities In E-Learning
EDUC 762- Assessment In E-Learning


Start Date: July 5
EDUC 646 Using Games for Learning and Assessment
  • No travel to campus required.
  • Meet your PDP goals for continuing education or license renewal
  • The courses are approved electives in the Master of Science in Education online degree program. http://www.uwstout.edu/programs/mse/index.cfm
Register today for summer online classes to reserve a spot. Registration closes soon. No tuition is due until July 18.

Register Online

For more information or to request a copy of a syllabus, contact:
JOAN VANDERVELDE
Online Professional Development College of Education, Hospitality, Health and Human Sciences Teaching, Learning and Leadership
715-642-0209 office 
vanderveldej@uwstout.edu
Facebook 415 10th Ave. E. 
116 Heritage Hall Menomonie, WI 54751
University of Wisconsin-Stout Wisconsin's Polytechnic University
  http://www.uwstout.edu/soe/profdev/courses.cfm

Thursday, June 1, 2017

Project Management for Instructional Development

Project Management for Instructional Development

EDUC 768 Project Management for Instructional Development

Online Course 3 semester hours graduate credit
Instructors: Dr. Paul Coverstone or Jane MacKenzie 
Summer: June 26 - August 18, 2017

Who Should Enroll

NOTE: This is the final required course in the sequence for individuals pursuing the Graduate Certificate in Instructional Design.
This course is an approved elective in the Master of Science in Education online degree program. 

What Will You Learn

Course Description: Examination of the initiation, planning, and closure of instructional development projects and practical knowledge on managing project scope, work breakdown structure, schedules, and resources including budgeting. Analysis of instructional development project life cycle.
This course replicates projects in the "real world," and you will complete all work in teams. Your peers will depend on you for timely feedback as you interact via email and the discussion board during team and small work groups to complete assigned tasks. Therefore, students need to login and participate with their group several times each week. 

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of the course, students will be able to:
  1. Break down the project management process and relate it to the instructional development process.
  2. Demonstrate an understanding of and application of components of the initiation phase by producing deliverables for the phase.
  3. Assess the value of a Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) and create a WBS.
  4. Develop detailed schedules for instructional development projects.
  5. Select and organize resources necessary for successful project completion.
  6. Plan and apply the steps in project closure.
  7. Adapt project management and instructional design principles to scale single projects to multi-course production models.
Course objectives are aligned with the following standards:
Wisconsin Standards for Teacher Development and Licensure (WI DPI): # 4
International Society for Technology in Education, National Educational Technology Standards (NETS-T) # 3a, 5b
Because this class is asynchronous and open to you 24/7, you may participate from your home or work computer during hours that are best for your work and family schedule.
The class is highly interactive with a significant discussion component. All projects/assignments will be submitted via the course Dropbox and discussion board.

SIGN UP SOON!

Register online
The School of Education reserves the right to cancel classes that do not meet minimum enrollment requirements.

For More Information

EDUC 761 Creating Collaborative Communities in E-Learning

EDUC 761 Creating Collaborative Communities in E-Learning

Online Course 3 semester hours graduate credit
Instructor: Dr. Maryruth Hicks 
Summer: June 26 - August 18, 2017
  • Tuition is the same for Wisconsin residents, out-of-state and international students.
  • There is no registration fee and no program application.
  • E-textbook provided at no additional cost.
  • Includes full access to lynda.com self-paced video tutorials to help develop course management and other technology skills.

You Will

  • Design orientation activities for the first week in an online course.
  • Manage electronic communications.
  • Recognize characteristics of strong and weak discussion facilitation.
  • Apply facilitation techniques to deepen critical thinking.
  • Analyze, assess, and encourage learner participation in online discussions.
  • Demonstrate collaboration in online environments.
  • Analyze how Web 2.0 “tools” build online and blended community.
  • Represent your understanding of collaborative communities in your professional e-portfolio.

Description

Concepts, methods, and research for creating and facilitating a collaborative online community of practice.

Who Should Enroll

Educators and trainers interested in using blended or fully online delivery for courses or training, or adding web-based components to enhance face-to-face instruction.
Participants may include:
  • Technical and community college instructors (adjunct and full-time)
  • College and university professors (adjunct and full-time)
  • K-12 teachers (blended classrooms and virtual schools)
  • Clinical healthcare educators involved in patient education, healthcare education, continuing education or in-service education, community health education, or academic healthcare education
  • Trainers in corporations, professional associations, nonprofit organizations, government, and military
  • Curriculum consultants, professional development coordinators, and distance education and continuing education leaders
Enroll in the course to meet your goals for 
  • professional development
  • continuing education
  • license renewal
  • graduate credits to transfer to another university
  • an elective in the Master of Science in Education online degree.
This course is an approved elective in the Master of Science in Education online degree program and is the introductory course in the E-Learning and Online Teaching Graduate Certificate.
The course is highly interactive with a significant discussion component.
All discussion postings, projects, and assignments will be submitted via the course discussion board and Dropbox.
Activities are conducted according to a schedule with specific due dates each week; there is one required live chat session in Week 7. Participants will determine a time that is convenient for all.
This class is essential for those who are interested in a career as an online instructor.
This is not a self-paced course.

e-Textbook

An e-textbook will be provided when you login to the course. You may open the e-book to read online from your laptop or desktop. The e-textbook software is compatible with an iPad, Kindle Fire or fully internet-capable device. It is not compatible with a Kindle Reader.
Lehmann, Kay and Lisa Chamberlin (2009). Making the Move to eLearning: Putting Your Course Online. Rowman & Littlefield Education Publishers. (Paperback) ISBN-13: 978-1-60709-041-0.
If you prefer to read a paperback textbook, instead of reading via your computer or tablet, you may purchase the book from amazon.com. 
Additional readings and lectures will be available online within the text of each module.

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, students will be able to:
  1. Develop a personal philosophy that reflects learning theory and guides online instruction that creates an environment for reflection, critical thinking, and collaboration.
  2. Analyze the role of the online facilitator and develop strategies to implement, encourage and manage interaction in the online classroom.
  3. Demonstrate appropriate planning considerations, guidelines and procedures to establish a productive, engaging e-learning environment.
  4. Frame critical thinking questions and design discussion prompts that lead to effective learning in the online classroom.
  5. Apply understanding of learner differences when facilitating an online community of practice.
  6. Evaluate application ideas for online discussions using recognized criteria and professional references and apply current research about successful teaching strategies to guide students before, during and after case scenarios, brainstorming, role playing and reaction postings.
  7. Develop a facilitation eportfolio of useful tools, tips, and facilitation techniques as well as the beginnings of 70-30 course preparation developed during the course.

Alignment with Standards

Course objectives are aligned with the International Society for Technology in Education, National Educational Technology Standards, (NETS-T) III, VI
No travel to campus is required. You may participate from your home or work computer during hours that are flexible and convenient for your work and family schedule.

SIGN UP SOON!

Register online
The School of Education reserves the right to cancel classes that do not meet minimum enrollment requirements.

For More Information...

Request Information Online
Contact Us: Dennis O'Connor, Program Advisor
E-learning and Online Teaching Certificate
Telephone: 530-318-1145
University of Wisconsin - Stout Menomonie, WI 54751
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Instructional Strategies and Assessment Methods

Instructional Strategies and Assessment Methods

EDUC 766 Instructional Strategies and Assessment Methods

Online Course 3 semester hours graduate credit
Instructor: Dr. Susan Manning
Summer: June 26 - August 17, 2017
Tuition, Due Dates, and Registration

Who Should Enroll

Students who have completed the prerequisite course: EDUC 765 Trends and Issues in Instructional Design
NOTE: This is the second course of the four required courses for individuals pursuing the Graduate Certificate in Instructional Design.

What You Will Learn

Course Description: Development of instructional goals, objectives and assessment of outcomes. Methods for assessing learner performance and mapping appropriate assessment methods to instructional strategies and learning objectives. Performance-based assessment and tools to assess learner performance. Design of formative and summative methods.
This course is an approved elective in the Master of Science in Education online degree program. 

e-Textbook

An e-textbook will be provided when you login to the course. You may open the e-book to read online from your laptop or desktop. The e-textbook software is compatible with an iPad, Kindle Fire or fully internet-capable device. It is not compatible with a Kindle Reader.
Horton, William. (2011). E-Learning by Design (2nd ed.). Pfeiffer. ISBN: 978-0470900024 
If you prefer to read a hard copy of the textbook instead of reading via your computer or tablet, you may purchase the book from online bookstores such as amazon.com, Barnes & Noble or textbooks.com. Be sure to allow for delivery time. NOTE the ISBN number and 2nd edition.
Also, you will review a few chapters in the textbook used in EDUC 765. Additional recommended web-based articles will be available via the course modules.

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of the course, students will be able to:
  1. Design well-defined instructional goals and learning objectives for all three domains.

  2. Evaluate and select instructional strategies based on front-end analysis which includes a focus on providing equitable access to digital tools and resources for culturally and linguistically diverse learners.

  3. Align appropriate instructional strategies with learning objectives.

  4. Evaluate a variety of assessment methods for learning including authentic assessments, self and peer evaluation, rubrics, online surveys, e-portfolios, tests and mini-quizzes for self-paced tutorials.

  5. Demonstrate research-based practices for choosing assessment models and align assessment methods with instructional strategies, objectives, and learning outcomes and justify selected assessment choice.

  6. Develop tools to evaluate instruction using formative and summative assessment methods.
Course objectives are aligned with the following teaching standards:
Wisconsin Standards for Teacher Development and Licensure (WI DPI): # 4, 7, 8
International Society for Technology in Education, National Educational Technology Standards (NETS-T) #2a, 2b, 2c, 2d
National Board Teaching Standards:
  • Use effective communication techniques, media and technology to foster active inquiry, collaboration and supportive interaction in the classroom.
  • Use instructional technology to enhance student learning.
  • Use formal and informal assessment strategies to evaluate student progress.

Course Concepts

  1. How objectives, instructional strategies, and assessment are linked.  The critical nature of triangulation.

  2. The importance of sequencing material at the various levels of instructional objectives, lessons, and topics.

  3. Instructional strategies: when and how to include activities for direct instruction, practice, and transfer of learning.  Examples include narrated PowerPoint, video, podcasts, and screencasts, drill and practice, case studies, self-assessments, games, and simulations.

  4. Assessing learning: methods for traditional and alternative assessments, including authentic assessments, self and peer evaluation, rubrics, online surveys, e-portfolios, tests and mini-quizzes for self-paced tutorials. The role of feedback in learning.

  5. How assessment informs evaluation. Appropriate use of formative and summative data for decision-making and future development.
Because this class is asynchronous and open to you 24/7, you may participate from your home or work computer during hours that are best for your work and family schedule.
The class is highly interactive with a significant discussion component. All projects/assignments will be submitted via the course Dropbox and discussion board. 

SIGN UP SOON!

Register online
The School of Education reserves the right to cancel classes that do not meet minimum enrollment requirements.

For More Information

Request Information Online 
Contact Us: School of Education 
Online Professional Development
University of Wisconsin - Stout Menomonie, WI 54751 
Phone: 715-232-2693
Browse Courses
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