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The Online Academy (TOA). John Baek Michelle Didier Dan Feinberg Lisa Herbert Danalyn Robinson Heather White. Overview. The project An online high school A partnership between GMU and Northern VA county school systems. Overview. Review of last semester
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The Online Academy(TOA) John Baek Michelle Didier Dan Feinberg Lisa Herbert Danalyn Robinson Heather White
Overview The project • An online high school • A partnership between GMU and Northern VA county school systems
Overview Review of last semester • Focus on performance analysis, design & development Mission Statement • Develop high quality courses, correlated to the Virginia SOL and COPLS model • Support the expert mentors
Overview • Redirection of focus • Focus this semester • Framework for continued development: code library, site structure, consistent design using style guidelines and templates • Field testing • Evaluation & usability testing • Complete the Intro module/ Resource guides
Overview • Our process • Team meetings • SME (teachers) meetings • Project management • Divide & conquer
Presentation Outline • Evaluation • Evaluation needs & goals • Methods • Findings & recommendations • Future of TOA • Framework for future development • Project recommendations
Evaluating TOA Need for Evaluation Methods of Evaluation Findings and Recommendations
Need for Evaluation • Inform and direct current and future development • Examine the usability of the checklist • Organization and self-regulation • Determine effectiveness of navigation • Locating resources • Intuitiveness—do the learners know where to go next? • Review the course modules • Clarity of instruction • Engagement and motivation of instruction • Adequacy of the resources, skills, and content for challenge • Pedagogical re-engineering (approach and format)
Evaluation Goals • Analyze instructional strengths • Determine the effectiveness of the design and transfer of learning • Evaluate the usability and the benefits of the checklist to the learner • Locate ease of use problems (navigation)
Methods of Evaluation • Quality assurance • Field testing • One-to-One evaluation • Expert review • Case study
Meeting the Evaluation Goals • Effectiveness of the design and transfer • Quality assurance • Case study • Expert review • Instructional strengths • One-to-one evaluation • Expert review • Case study • Checklist Usability • Expert review • Field test • Locate ease of use problems • Field test • One-to-one evaluation
For each course, at least two modules were field tested. • English 11 • The Two Macks: A Harlem Renaissance Club • Regionalism, Realism, and Nationalism • World History I • India and China • African Civilizations • World History II • Imperialism • Between the Wars Chemistry Mars Matters Sappy Solutions Earth Science Passing Gas…For Effect Only Like It…Weather or Not Algebra Graphing – Slopes Geometry Right Triangles/ Trigonometry Points, Lines, Planes, Segments, and Angles
Before anything was field tested, the modules were evaluated for Quality Assurance. • Forms that don’t work • Typing mistakes • JavaScript errors • Form elements not properly labeled • Pages that don’t print correctly • Consistent styles • Missing page titles or code comments
Field Testing • 14 Modules • Technical problems • Student response • Self regulation • Synchronous discussion (Digichat)
Digichat • Encourages peer interaction • Encourages mentor-learner interaction • Mentor office hours
Intro Module • Need for Intro Module • Elements of most modules • Use basic TOA functions
Mentor Resources • Overview • Objectives • Answer keys
Challenge • Problem based context for entire module • Background building knowledge • Culminating activity
The Checklist • Self regulation • Mentor-student negotiation • Links to activities
TOA Introductory Module • Research for the module was gathered from several sources • Teachers’ feedback from their field testing • Results from one-to-one evaluation • Review of related literature • Maintain theme of the story introduced in the Challenge
Working with a Mentor Activity
Being an Online Learner Activity
One-To-One Evaluations A face to face meeting with members of our target audience where we ask them to use TOA and give us their opinion on the site.
One-To-One Evaluations • Is the instruction engaging and motivating? • Will the student know the references? • Is the content at the appropriate level? • Does the checklist provide self-regulatory benefits? • Are the instructions clear? • Can the user locate resources? • Can learners navigate? • Are the resources, skills, and content adequate for completing the challenge?
One-To-One Evaluation Process • Recruit students. • Prepare evaluation questions. • Design data collection tools. • Write script. • Set up testing area. • Conduct evaluation. • Analyze results. • Write evaluation report.
1. Recruit Students • We were provided access to two students at a Washington, DC private school • “Ralph” – A 16 year old white male currently enrolled in Chemistry • “Kelly” – A 16 year old white female who had taken Chinese History
3. Design Data Collection Tools • Tape recorded and transcribed • Field notes were taken by interviewer and observer • Follow up questionnaire was given