ABSTRACT

Responding to both the trend towards increasing online enrollments as the demand for face-to-face education declines, and to the immediate surge in remote learning owing to the COVID-19 pandemic, this book provides vital guidance to higher education institutions on how to develop faculty capacity to teach online and to leverage the affordances of an ever-increasing array of new and emerging learning technologies.This book provides higher education leaders with the context they need to position their institutions in the changing online environment, and with guidance to build support in a period of transition.It is intended for campus leaders and administrators who work with campus teams charged with identifying learning technologies to meet an agreed upon program- or institution-level educational needs; for those coordinating across campus to build consensus on implementing online strategies; and for instructional designers, faculty developers and assessment directors who assist departments and faculty effectively integrate learning technologies into their courses and programs. It will also appeal to faculty who take an active interest in improving online teaching.The contributors to this volume describe the potential of artificial intelligence algorithms, such as those that fuel learning analytics software that mines LMS data to enable faculty to quickly and efficiently assess individual students’ progress in real time, prompting either individual attention or the need to more generally clarify concepts for the class as whole. They describe and provide access to a hybrid professional development MOOC and an associated WIKI that curate information about a wide range of learning software solutions currently available; and present case studies that offer guidance on building the buy-in and consensus needed to successfully integrate learning technologies into course, program- and institution-level contexts.In sum, this book provides readers with a comprehensive understanding of the technological capabilities available to them and identifies collaborative processes related to engaging and building institutional support for the changes needed to provide the rapidly growing demand for effective and evidence-based online learning.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

part One|122 pages

An Introduction to Current and Emerging 21st-Century Learning Technologies

part Two|74 pages

Some Representative Examples of Course-Based Use of Emerging Learning Technologies

chapter 5|37 pages

Applying a Learning Analytics Approach to Improve Course Achievement

Using Data Stored in Learning Management Systems

chapter 6|11 pages

Data-Informed Online Discussion Facilitation

Using Data From a Social Network Analysis App to Improve Students' Online Interactions

chapter 7|14 pages

Teaching, Technology, and Building Trust

What I've Learned About How Artifical Intelligence Can Improve Student Writing

chapter 8|10 pages

How We May Learn

Cybersecurity Awareness Training as a Model for Future Learning Platforms