Curriculum and Instructional Designers like myself work to support and enhance the learning experience of students/users through the application of research-driven course design principles and the use of innovative technologies.
Friday, April 20, 2012
The Moodle Wiki: A How-To Guide
Each member of the group has been assigned to one feature or tool in Moodle, and after we figure out how it works and what it does, we each present to the group on it. This way, no one person feels the burden of having to learn everything. I was asked to study and report on the wiki feature in Moodle, along with the Groups function.
Here's what I put together:
The Moodle Wiki: A How-To Guide
Groups in Moodle: A How-To Guide
Monday, September 19, 2011
Interactive Course Catalog for Business Studies in Human Resource Management
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Interactive Slideshow for Politics & Religion Course
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Labor Studies: Informational Learning Resources
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Google Docs & Asynchronous Class Collaboration
Monday, September 13, 2010
Using Wordle in Online Course Discussion
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Audio-visuals and Cognitive Reiteration
Working with a course developer on a course about Globalization, I wanted a way to provide images at the top of every section as a way of visually introducing the topics to be covered. This provides stimulation for cognitive reiteration later in the course, when students are working with the content and they have already seen the images in context. That re-use can also provide a level of consistency as well as familiarity.
Globalization is a complex topic and there were many images I could have used, but the course has a thematic focus on labor and trade. With this in mind, I chose images that some students may find surprising, or even a little bit unsettling. I wanted to challenge some potential sterotypes and/or preconceptions about who actually makes up the working class in a global economy.