ADL Program, Advising, Blackboard, ePortfolios, Focus on the learning, Innovation Plan, Instructional Design, It's all about the learning, Leadership, Learner's Mindset, Learning, Online Learning, Outcomes, Why

Free Write


What is your course about?

My course is about onboarding students to college life. The course aims to explain what an advisor is and what they can do to help students. The course outlines the student’s responsibilities in their college experience and within the advising relationship. The course helps students understand university policies and procedures, including support information like success services.

How does it fit into a program?

Advising falls within both enrollment management and student success arenas. Advisors become the centralized hub of information and referrals, which primes advisors as excellent facilitators of the learning process through an advising course. Each major falls within a college department, and there are a variety of program needs based on those differences.

What is it that excites you about this course?

My excitement about this course is two fold. First, the opportunity to help learners become self-motivated learners and to take control of their academic pursuits. I am excited that learners will learn how to navigate the college experience with skills they can apply to life. Secondly, I am excited for advisors to collaborate and combine their knowledge into resources for advisees to grow and learn. There is a future possibility of learners collaborating and supporting one another through both peer-advisors and collective discussions, which is very exciting to consider.

What are the non-negotiable elements of the course?

The advising course must relieve advisors of the information transfer aspects of the advising relationship. Advisors are discouraged and overworked by the sheer number of advisees they must see each registration cycle. Limited time for advising appointments, high turn-over rates, and low-morale among the department effects learners experience and advisors expertise. Through this advising course, advisors will be able to direct learners to resource and free their advising interactions to become life changing relationships that enhance both the learner and the advisors lives.

What are some secondary elements you want to fit in?

I see now that this advising course has the opportunity to help students find their purpose in life and stay connected with their long term goals and motivations for coming to college. All to often when the coursework gets challenge or we face personal obstacles we can decide that college isn’t for us or we weren’t really interested in that topic. I think helping students self-actualize by working through the reflection of their college growth, learning, and challenges can help today’s learners embrace the learners mindset.

ETC:

Sincerely I would like for the advising course to become a place that gives students the choice of delivery method, time of day, social interaction (or lack-thereof), and limits hesitation to ask questions they might perceive as silly or common knowledge to others. I also believe that there is amazing opportunity for learners to support one another and form collectives of support.


Source: Situational Factors: Defining Your Course

ADL Program, Advising, Blackboard, ePortfolios, Focus on the learning, Goals, Innovation Plan, Instructional Design, It's all about the learning, Leadership, Learner's Mindset, Online Learning, Outcomes, Personal, Professional, Professional Learning, Reflecting

Design – from the starting line


Backward design…

How extremely humbling to realize that I am finally at the point where I am creating my innovation idea. Everything I have been learning through the program on how to help develop my team through professional learning and ways that these resources can contribute to significant learning environments both equip me with resources and leave me overwhelmed at the reality of this authentic opportunity. I really do have an opportunity to revolutionize advising within my organization.

Now, I get to build my course, my ubiquitous resource, my example of revolutionary advising for learner and advisor alike.

If you are taking EDLD 5318 Instructional Design Online Learning in the ADL Program – How are you feeling in your learning process?

I, for one am still stuck at the starting line – “perfection is the enemy of the good” – has me not even having done my introduction discussion, since we were invited to create that utilizing video resources, I think I want to really plan out my introduction so that it can become a piece of the final product at the conclusion of this course. As a result, I’m thinking that the normally simple piece of each course requires more thought, time, and reflection as a piece of this course’s learning puzzle.

I am going to reach out to my learning community and see if we can plan a collaborative session to brainstorm and discuss our plans. I will share my process as I work through this first Instructional Design assignment in hopes of helping you through your learning process too.

ADL Program, Blackboard, Contributions, Learning, Tips

Discussion posts


May 2, 2022

Seventy-one! That is how many discussion posts I made this weekend. How do I know? Because I finally found this handy little trick that allows you to subscribe to discussion posts in Blackboard.

If you have also had a difficult time keeping up with discussion posts that are made/added after your last review, then maybe this little trick will prove helpful to you too.

Update!! (June 2022)

Now that the Blackboard System has updated to Ultra, the subscription feature is no more. However, there is still a way to be notified when new discussion posts are made.

Option 1: Blackboard App

  • Open Blackboard App
    • Click Settings
    • Push Notifications
    • New discussion responses >
      • Toggle on/off

Option 2: Desktop version

As of 06/28/2022, this option did not work for me, as I do not have discussions messages in my list of notification settings

  • LU Connect
    • LU Learn (Blackboard)
    • Click your name
    • Click Global Notification Settings/Email Notifications
    • Check the box next to new discussion messages
    • Confirm settings for email once a day vs right away
    • Save changes

Blackboard (Old, non-ultra systems)

To subscribe to a discussion board post:

  • LU Connect
    • LU Learn (Blackboard)
    • Courses
    • Click on the Course Name
    • Click on Discussions
    • Click the discussion thread you plan to follow
    • Click Subscribe

Before

After


As I was creating these screenshots, the inquisitive and experimental nature that is encouraged through the ADL program is paying off. I noticed the “list view” and wondered what that feature might do. *click*


Turns out the tree view may be really helpful in determining which threads have not yet been reviewed or commented on previously.


There is a search feature as well.


Do you have any favorite Blackboard tricks you can share in the comments section?