The Difference Between Remote Teaching and “Online Learning."
This differentiation is intended as an informal pedagogical description of context. Campus SIRIS submissions should always adhere to formal Online Learning Data Definitions and codes.
Asynchronous: Online, but not live, or at the same time/place. 100% of the Direct instruction occurs under time delay; that is, direct instruction is recorded/stored and accessed later.
Synchronous: Online live video. 100% of the Direct instruction occurs in real time without (time) delay.
Hybrid
A portion (0.01% - 99.9%) of the direct instruction of the course section’s curricular content is delivered to the student via an online communication method and the remaining portion of the direct instruction is required to be delivered face to face.
Hyflex
Combines online and face-to-face instruction simultaneously into one single course section. Students are able to participate in class in different ways: as a synchronous distance learner (via real-time, video-streaming); as an asynchronous distance learner (accessing materials, recorded lectures, and responding at a later time); as a face-to-face learner (physically present in the classroom); or as a flexible learner (with a degree of choice as to how they participate each week; sometimes face-to-face, sometimes by streaming class sessions, etc.).
*There are other types/modes/models/approaches/combinations (such as face-to-face. self-paced, AI enabled, competency-based, apprenticeship, adaptive, MOOCS, etc.). A limited list of delivery models is presented here for the sake of simplicity, Taken from https://online.suny.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/SUNY-and-IPEDS-Online-Learning-Definitions-May-2020.pdfRemote Teaching & Learning for Summer and (possibly/probably) Fall 2020
Because of the COVID19 emergency there is a lack of time and there are insufficient resources to fully prepare the numbers of faculty and courses necessary, which results in a continuation of the emergency circumstances characterized in remote teaching.
Based on your campus supports, tools, and recommendations; your student circumstances; discipline-specific needs/requirements; and your personal adaptability and skills, you may be asked to make choices and decisions about your upcoming course design and delivery. The need to continue social distancing into the fall may require us to rethink everything from classrooms to residences. Faculty teaching lab and studio courses, research, practicum and hand's on courses where access to equipment may need to explore creative course delivery approaches.
This Remote Teaching Checklist is intended to help you prepare and plan for remote teaching.
© 2022 Created by Alexandra M. Pickett.
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