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HYBRID INSTRUCTION IN RURAL AREAS Leecy Wise, Reconnection Company leecy@reconnectioncompany.com
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Background experiences in delivering hybrid instruction. College students (ESL/Freshman English prep) College instructors (All disciplines) Adult education instructors (Professional Development) High school students (Spanish I and II) Challenges faced with different populations. Success/Strategy features developed. Best practices using different delivery tools.
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Resistance to change Connecting to the screen Monitor views Limited communication choices Reverse empty-nest syndrome
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More training for off-site facilitators Elimination of self-monitor Email accounts and carriers Visits to off-site classes
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Resistance to change Perception of “distant” Lack of training to engage distant students Fear of machine replacement Fear of technology Cheat fear Fear of class distribution among campuses Empty-nest syndrome
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Faculty Handbook Intensive training and practice w/ paid release time Supervised instruction Visits to off-site classes
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GED FAMILY LITERACY ABE ESL
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Hybrid graduate credit courses did not work. Online courses did not work. (Moodle) Onsite workshops had limited success.
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Short and sweet Elluminate Lunch and Learn sessions with PD hours. Lots of reminders through state listserv and Tech Beat publication. chiresources.pbworks.com Email and phone support CCCOnline undergraduate courses. (LIA certification.
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Meet once a week Lab three days with computer program All instructions and resources online Class site and blog Email Hot Potatoes Power Point content slides Additional Web resources: games, pronunciation, images (picture dictionaries), Google Earth
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Resistance to new format Limited connectivity Undeveloped independent study skills Literacy gaps Lack of adequate lab supervision “Excused” absences 4-day week Attitude toward foreign languages The teenage “thing”
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Daily instructions Letter to families Graded daily work Labels on everything Permission from principle for late work Copies of everything to lab facilitator Personal blogs Audio clips Assign role of learning to students Virtual visits with reports in English
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Train participants for different formats. Put it in writing through different forms. Provide accessible orientation or tutorials. Make expectations perfectly clear. Make assessment criteria perfectly clear. Assess, assess, assess.. Performance. Technology. Provide constant feedback/rewards. Insert an onsite visit if possible.
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Discussion is essential with lots of monitoring and clear expectations. Click, click, click. Reflection is highly encouraged. Emails must be active and available. Daily or frequent Internet access is required. Rubrics are highly encouraged. Flexible but not self-paced.
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Interaction is critical. Rubrics are highly encouraged. Have plans A-Z. Train monitors/facilitators and participants. Assign a student contact point.
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Use time to mentor and model skills that students can access otherwise. Model and provide practice in study skills. Check, check, check. Model and practice study skills. Vary interaction every five minutes. Assess during some sessions.
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Set up personal and class blogs. Provide permissions and feeds as desired. Post assignment instructions in class blogs. Have students post assignments in their blogs. Invite students to interact with each others’ content.
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Check Web access and installed programs. Require a trained lab monitor. Install needed applications, such as Google Earth and other learning applications. Have online quizzes monitored.
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Learning is invisible. We only know it’s happening by the changes it produces. Let’s not look for change in only one place. As we learn, they learn.. in their way, in their time, at their pace.
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Leecy Wise, Reconnection Company leecy@reconnectioncompany.com
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