ADL Program, Humor, Instructional Design, Learner's Mindset, Learning, Online Learning

Is Educause psychic?


Somehow, Educause always knows just what I’m studying and sends me such timely and relevant information. I am so glad I followed those primary sources early in the program and subscribed to their review.

Before starting the ADL Program, I learned that my employer offered LinkedIn Learning online courses. I love personal and professional development, so I started taking lessons on various topics. One that was particularly interesting to me was about Trauma-Informed Leadership. I had never heard of the term before, but as I listened to the training, I nodded in agreement the whole time. I could picture the conversations and the people.

Fast forward two years or so, and now I find myself in a leadership role, attempting to heal my and others’ work and personal traumas. As I struggle through the instructional design course content, my prior work in the program refine and reflect on what exactly this phase of the innovation plan needs to accomplish. Ding! A campus email notification to find today’s Educause Review Titled TI-ADDIE: A Trauma-Informed Model of Instructional Design.

A revised version of the ADDIE Instructional Design Model that I am smack dab in the middle of learning about while simultaneously applying so I can submit my design overview. As I read about this version which adds care and recursion to the traditional ADDIE Model, I can see another rabbit trail to follow. If there is anything I am all in head over heels for, it is caring!

Whoo! Constructivist learning, you have really got to try it sometime!

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Action Verbs


Learning GoalsLearning ActivitiesAssessment Activities
Foundational knowledgeCreate: Conduct, Compile, Predict, Animate, Develop, Align, Perform, Discuss, Exhibit

Evaluate: Rate, Validate, Estimate, Measure, Prove, Select, Appraise, Support, Critique,
Reflect

Analyze: Identify, Contrast, Illustrate, Calibrate, Classify, Organize, Choose, Delay, Identify

Apply: Prepare, Explore, Give Example, Discuss, Process, Act, Consult, Realize, Share

Understand: Explain, Paraphrase, Restate, Organize, Annotate, Collect, Accept, Illustrate, Adhere

Remember: Define, Name, Indicate, List, Identify, Collect, Choose, Ask, Follow, Comply with
ApplicationCreate: Design, Develop, Create, Combine, Produce, Organize, Pledge, Propose, Form

Evaluate: Critique, Justify, Contrast, Amend, Reframe, Respond, Review, Defend, Decide

Analyze: Outline, Deduce, Compare and Contrast, Handle, Infer, Map out, Report, Examine, Investigate, Survey

Apply: Operate, Calculate, Solve, Hypothesize, Obtain, Design, Propose, Persevere, Invite

Understand: Summarize, Provide Examples, Adapt, Use, Maintain, Develop, Show, Suggest, Express

Remember: Enumerate, State, Reproduce, Replicate, Sequence, Browse, Read, Explore, Imagine
IntegrationCreate: Construct, Predict, Modify, Assemble, Adapt, Display, Integrate, Participate, Manage

Evaluate: Conclude, Associate, Test, Check, Compare, Determine, Grade, Modify

Analyze: Question, Relate, Formulate, Tabulate, Graph, Dismantle, Link, Integrate, Comply

Apply: Personalize, Compare, Combine, Concept map, Graph, Synthesize, Recommend, Acknowledge, Integrate

Understand: Extend, Associate, Convert, Plot, Draw Assemble, Restate, Connect, Visualize

Remember: Indicate, Recite, Blend, Merge, Imitate, Exercise, Collect, Trace, Follow, Describe
Human dimensionCreate: Advocate, Propose, Produce, Initiate, Invent, Instruct, Decide, Collaborate, Role play

Evaluate: Evaluate, Give Feedback, Clarify, Resolve, Setup, Determine, Support, Advocate, Exemplify

Analyze: Characterize, Distinguish, Analyze, Categorize, Collaborate, Illustrate, Mediate, Detail, Discover

Apply: Demonstrate, Modify, Discover, Promote, Guide, Display, Associate, Cooperate, Specify, Support

Understand: Represent, Compare, Translate, Infer, Mix, Record, Make, Note, Discriminate, Express, Interact

Remember: Specify, Recognize, Label, Follow, React, Map, Listen, Accept, Seek
CaringCreate: Generate, Improve, Restructure, Coordinate, Combine, Synthesize, Cultivate, Theorize, Commit

Evaluate: Assess, Judge, Diagnose, Balance, Adapt, Reconcile, Value, Recommend, Promote

Analyze: Explore, Correlate, Demonstrate, Associate, Dispense, Configure, Empathize, Practice, Assemble

Apply: Demonstrate, Illustrate, Identify, Filter, Transfer, Express, Initiate, Share

Understand: Elaborate, Interpret, Respond, Combine, Display, Agree with, Value, Renew interest

Remember: Quote, Recognize, Recall, Read, Copy, Mimic, Recollect, Adhere, Attend
Learning how to learnCreate: Set Goals, Plan, Experiment, Dramatize, Structure, Campaign, Reflect

Evaluate: Justify, Predict, Resolve, Formulate, Measure, Determine, Verify, Internalize

Analyze: Self-Assess, Self-Regulate, Frame questions, Categorieze, Arrange, Diagram, Scrutinize, Map, Categorize

Apply: Modify, Deconstruct, Inquire, Compose, Practice, Sketch, Exemplify, Utilize, Show

Understand: Describe, Interpret, Translate, Diagram, Balance, Grasp, Participate, Review, Comply

Remember: Recall, Monitor, Self-Monitor, Write, Underline, Search, Recite, Listen
Action verbs using Bloom’s and Fink’s taxonomies. (2021, November). https://effectiveness.syr.edu/; Syracuse University Institutional Effectiveness and Assessment (IEA). https://effectiveness.syr.edu/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Action-Verbs.pdf

Reference

Action verbs using Bloom’s and Fink’s taxonomies. (2021, November). https://effectiveness.syr.edu/; Syracuse University Institutional Effectiveness and Assessment (IEA). https://effectiveness.syr.edu/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Action-Verbs.pdf

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

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Where it all began


My innovation plan was born out of a desperate desire to increase student motivation to seek the information they need to be successful in their academic pursuits. When I began the ADL Program, I was advising for a few online graduate Master of Education programs (including this one). I kept having students miss critical deadlines and requirements due to their lack of information. It was not that they did not have access to the information that was provided, published, and available; instead, it was a lack of inquisitivism that prevented them from even beginning the search for understanding.

Revisiting the process and learning I undertook with the facilitation of Dr. Kelly Grogan while creating significant learning environments, I keep looking for ways to align outcomes. What are my desired outcomes? I want learners to be autonomously motivated.

In my typical form and fashion, I begin my studies by reviewing, reading, and note-taking through the resources provided in my program coursework. Inevitably, I search for Learner’s Mindset discussions on the topic and/or YouTube videos on key concepts, terms, or goals.

This source resonates with me and can serve as a reminder to all of us as we endeavor to create significant learning environments.

Jon Stolk recommends that we remember to utilize the following:

  • Real Tools (physical need)
  • Real Choice (thinking, reasoning, decision-making)
  • Real Trust (emotions/feelings)

He continues by stating that “when students feel these things (choice, trust, acceptance, encouragement, care, dialogue), there are extremely strong positive correlations to a bunch of the stuff we say we care about (self-efficacy, metacognition, active help-seeking, creativity, task value, peer learning, and intrinsic motivation)” (TEDx Talks, 2015).

Therefore, I intend to keep these in mind as I prepare to outline my plans for an online learning course’s instructional design. I keep hearing Dr. Harapnuik telling me to focus on the learning.

Reference

TEDx Talks. (2015, November 5). Creating autonomy-supportive learning environments | Jon Stolk | TEDxSMU [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SxlFzrfdqa4

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Naval-Gazing


While reviewing this weeks content for discussion in the ADL Program‘s EDLD 5318, Instructional Design Online Learning course, I heard the term “naval-gazing.” I had to back up the video, replay it, die laughing, and then search for the meaning and origin of the term.

How have I made it this far in life without ever knowing about this Ancient Greek term (principle of Omphaloskepsis)?!?!

Now here are a few interesting observations.

I have watched this video several times, taken detailed notes, and connected thoughts several times before, never noticing the phrase.

I had to exercise and embrace the Learner’s Mindset to even seek additional information.

I could not help but draw parallels to my learning process throughout the ADL program. Without even realizing or recognizing it at the time, I was detailing the same fundamentals addressed by this discussion in the recent interview I was honored to participate in about the Learner’s Mindset.

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Picturing the Finish Line


Somebody pinch me. I must be dreaming!

I have spent hours and hours watching Learner’s Mindset Discussions. Never would I ever have dreamed I would be in one! What a dream come true to sit and visit with two inspirational educators.

LMD EP47

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Contributions, 5315


Measurement Strategy Course

  • Spring 2023
  • Course Number: EDLD 5315
  • Course Title: Assessing Digital Learning and Instruction

Contributions to learning and learning community


I am giving myself a score of 97 out of 100

Crediting Core Group Members: Annababette DiemeckeAshleigh CarterKristin WinzerPatrick Rodriguez, and Valary Patterson

Crediting Collective Members: https://advising.blog/collaborations/

Key and Supporting

Contributions

Since I am not pursuing the accelerated path to program completion, I do my best to welcome new members to the learning community and help foster connections for others interested in similar projects. Many of us have stayed active in our collaborative group through a Google Drive and a GroupMe chat, both of which I host for the group.

Our learning community is committed to supporting one another. I have witnessed the power of the collective as members with no common classes come together to troubleshoot a website issue or clarify an assignment. Anytime, day or night, someone is willing to give support. I am excited to help foster that learning environment for myself and my classmates. I always ensure that I provide helpful feed-forward to my core collaboration group and all the members of the ADL Collective GroupMe chat.

I continue to refine, revisit and revise all prior assignments throughout this course, and this session pushed me to look objectively at my innovation plan. Learning about action research, struggling through writing challenges, and putting everything together into the final compilation continues to make this experience authentic. I can see my innovation coming to life. I am prepared to implement the strategies learned throughout.

I dissected the assigned course readings and pursued my information on the topics of this session. Specifically, throughout my literature review, I continued to deepen my learning on my topic as I followed links from cited sources.

I always met the course activity deadlines and posted discussion prompts and replies in hopes of engaging in a dialog about the action research process.

I engaged in every opportunity presented by hosting Zoom sessions and attending all class meetings and office hours. I engage in chat threads to review assignments, clarify questions, and provide support. I always cite source material in blogs and discussion postings. I have actively shared additional sources of information on the topics we study to offer breadcrumbs to my classmates and future ADL students and to further my understanding. I have truly embraced the learners’ mindset.

Reflections

What Worked?

In the simplest terms? The Learners’ Mindset

Embracing the opportunity to learn even more about my innovation plan worked. Completing my second literature review was an immense learning experience overcoming fears and self-doubt.

Sharing my writing struggles through blogging was also helpful throughout the learning process. As I worked through learning about action research, I blogged about the experience and my thoughts on narrowing my topic. I see the benefits of doing the work and evaluating the learning process.

The support given and found throughout the ADL Cohort Collective GroupMe chat is still the most humbling thing to witness. I created this group chat after losing all the members of my first learning community. Out of a desperate need to find myself a learning community, I founded a support group that I hope will continue long after I complete the program.

What could be better?

The semester had an unusual survival feel to it. I found myself craving the discussions and interactions my classmates and I have had over the last several semesters. I am trying to determine if the course material had everyone deep in the research process or if it was the time of the year keeping everyone busy with work and family commitments.

I kept giving support and encouragement by checking in with community members. The term seemed detached, collectively.

We still came together when a member needed help, but there were fewer in-depth conversations about our projects. Again, likely because of the nature of academic research and writing. I would have liked to experience more discussion on each course component. We had a few Zoom sessions and worked through assignments, but I missed learning with my classmates at the level we had in the past.

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Believe it

You have to believe it.

Leaning into the learners’ mindset, I have to ask myself daily to believe and trust it.

I have been entirely transparent about my writing struggles. I voiced in class that I need more confidence in my understanding of the subject matter to give my analysis and knowledge of other authors’ statements and research. This lack of confidence sends me back to the research reading and collecting more information, sources, and additional research. I can cite sources all day, but when I have to draw connections between material and express my understanding, I trigger memories of my K-12 educational experience and lose confidence. Research can become my distraction technique (an observation grad school has illuminated) to avoid the vulnerability that is academic writing.

Since I have reviewed hundreds of pieces of literature on my innovation topic formally over the last year and four months but professionally for the previous nine years and ten months, this topic is truly a passion project of the heart. Born out of desperation to help students, the advocate in me also desperately wants this tool for advisors. We are in tear-filled meetings over a crisis of self-issues. Advisors watch the battle young adults face with themselves over your disappointment if they decide whether or not they are pursuing their goals and dreams or yours.

I desperately want advising to be about the transformative development I read about in the literature. I felt disappointed after my first literature review as I recognized I was not meeting the goals and standards set by my profession. I now see that I am efficient at prescriptive advising. From a medical professional background, procedural information transfer, triaging issues, and answering questions came naturally. I know how to connect students to policy and procedures. I efficiently direct them to their departmental information on degree plans and course information. I am helpful and efficient at answering questions with source links (because advisors are only as good as the accuracy of the published information). I have always had an efficiency perspective. Therefore, I formalized my advising process, communications, and documentation for record keeping.

An advising course provides advisors and students a voice to illuminate problems faced by learners as expressed through cohort/meta-major discussions and assessments. Advisors could improve resources with an advising course, grade book, discussion boards, collaborative group sessions, and modules on common issues. Flipped advising would allow that effort to improve even further through media and collaboration with an advising team. I suspect turnover is both from burnout and demoralization. Advising is a passion profession. Many interview questions touch on helping people achieve their goals. Yet it can become a repetitive process of covering the same policies, procedures, and systems instead of all the things it could be if these items didn’t consume advising interactions. The ability to extend the advising sessions and depth beyond a 30-minute advising appointment twice a semester (optimistically). How can we help transform learners’ lives in 1 hour a term? Flipped advising would help us meet those needs while also relieving us of so many of the repetitive interactions we have day after day. Those fulfilling aspects of developmental advising forge a bond between advisor and advisee. Those connections are the ones that make commencement so special and a commitment to this profession so worth it.

Advisors consistently wonder if their efforts improved outcomes, but the cyclical and reactive nature of the industry can have us moving on to the next initiative with no feedback on the last one. Smiling faces that thank you for supporting them while wearing caps and gowns sure go a long way in motivating outcomes and innovations.

So now, I need to support all those beliefs with evidence from the existing literature.

By golly, I think I understand the point of a literature review finally.

Action Research, ADL Program, Advising, ePortfolios, Goals, Innovation Plan, Learner's Mindset, Learning, Personal, Professional, Professional Learning, Reflecting, Research

Educause Amazing!


They get me! They really get me.

Learner-Centered Advising for Student Success: Leveraging Backward Design, Collaboration, and the LMS

Reference

Mojeiko, L., Haskell, A., & Dunn, S. (2021, January 19). Learner-Centered advising for student success: Leveraging backward design, collaboration, and the LMS. EDUCAUSE. https://er.educause.edu/blogs/2021/1/learner-centered-advising-for-student-success-leveraging-backward-design-collaboration-and-the-lms