ABSTRACT

This volume offers a detailed case study of the internationally acclaimed online programmes in Egyptology at the University of Manchester, UK. It distils over a decade of online teaching experience and student feedback, providing guidance for instructors developing their own online offerings.

Today, many universities are actively encouraging their teaching staff towards the development of:

• online programmes (programmes to be taught entirely online) and/or

• online units (units to be incorporated into “blended” programmes taught partially online and partially face-to-face).

Unfortunately, the staff tasked with the development of online learning rarely have access to the expertise that they need to help them utilise their teaching skills to their full potential. Technical assistance may be provided by the university e-learning department, but pedagogical and practical help – the support of colleagues with many years’ experience teaching online – is lacking.

Written by experts, the book provides an invaluable guide for those wishing – or being compelled – to establish their own online courses within the humanities.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

Kingpin of the educational situation

chapter 1|15 pages

Distance education

The past, the present and the future

chapter 2|25 pages

Beneath the bandages

Teaching Egyptology Online

chapter 3|14 pages

Activities

Sparking student engagement

chapter 4|6 pages

Assessment strategies

Problems and solutions

chapter 5|11 pages

Lectures and podcasts

Creation and optimal use

chapter 7|4 pages

Mumford the Mummy

Online Egyptology for children

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion

Helpful hints for setting up an online course