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Improving the Student Experience: Making course documents “User Friendly” Suzi Shapiro, PhD Indiana University East. 2013 FACET Retreat May 17-19, 2013. AbstrACT. Technology is a valuable tool for the creation and transmission of information, but we do not always use these tools
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Improving the Student Experience: Making course documents “User Friendly”Suzi Shapiro, PhDIndiana University East 2013 FACET RetreatMay 17-19, 2013
AbstrACT • Technology is a valuable tool for the creation and transmission of information, but we do not always use these tools • optimally to support the real human beings in our classrooms. We often create documents for our way of thinking • and with tools that we find comfortable. We imitate the forms we have experienced in the classes we have taken. • It is easy to forget that students may have perspectives that are not the same as our own. Many of our “first • generation” students are unaware of the academic conventions we no longer question. It is common for students to • be uncomfortable with complex sentence structure and jargon ridden language. Students may be affected by limited • vision or mobility or even their ability to pay attention for long periods of time. And – as we commonly hear in • the faculty lounge - “ People don’t read!” You learned to write in your college classes and you make use of your • considerable skills in preparing syllabi, assignments, and instructions. Your documents are organized, thoughtful, • and grammatically correct with no spelling errors. So why do your students fail to understand (or remember) what • you have written? Recent experience in writing for online reading has demonstrated that people do not READ the • way we think that they do. They scan documents: Jumping around and looking for important or relevant words and • phrases. They quit if bored or confused and often ignore a large percentage of the information later in the document. • How can you use what has been learned about human behavior when “consuming” information to improve the • usefulness of your class documents? Make that word processor do all the things it can do better than a typewriter!
You write for yourself! • Teachers create course documents: • For ourselves • The way we were taught • To demonstrate our skills • organized, • thoughtful, • grammatically correct • no spelling errors.
Why do your students fail to understand (or remember) what you have written? • People do not READ the way we think that they do. • They scan documents: • Jump around • Look for important or relevantwords • They QUIT if bored or confused • They often ignore a large percentage of the information later in the document
How do people read? • Scanning a web page for an answer to a question • Visual Impairment
“ People don’t read!” • Students may: • Be first generation college students • Have different perspectives • Be unaware of academic conventions • Be uncomfortable with complex sentence structure • Be unfamiliar with jargon ridden language. • Be affected by limited : vision mobility ability to pay attention
Use a word processor • to do all the things it can do BETTERthan a typewriter!
Preparing course materials? • But this is the way my professors did it when I was in school. • Not smart enough to understand the instructions? Those folks don’t belong in college! • If a student has a disability, the accommodations people will take care of it.
U.S. Rehabilitation Act of 1973 • Prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability.
Section 504 • "No otherwise qualified [sic] individual with a disability in the United States shall, solely by reason of his/her [sic] disability, be excluded from the participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance."
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 • extends anti-discrimination legislation to all institutions of higher education regardless of whether or not the institution receives federal funds
National Statistics (1999) • Number of undergraduate students in the United States who report having a disability • 6% of the student body • An Institutional Perspective on Students with Disabilities in Postsecondary Center for Educational Statistics, Postsecondary Education Quick Information 1999 (Taken from DO-IT Faculty Room Page, 12/12/08: • http://www.washington.edu/doit/Faculty/Rights/Background/statistics.html)
Survey Data • 5,976 of the 240,122 students • six reporting schools, • approximately 2.5%
Disabilities NOT reported by students? • Common disabilities: • Too tired • Too busy • Too stressed • To think clearly & attend to tasks.
How can we be sure…. • We are: • communicating effectively? • giving all students an equal opportunity to learn? • not unintentionally creating barriers?
The solution • Research on creating information that is accessible and understandable to the widest possible variety of students. • UNIVERSAL DESIGN
How do we create documents that Communicate effectively? • Simple is good!
Step 1 • Determine your objectives • or outcomes • for an assignment • or course.
Step 2 • Ask yourself • “What are the questions a student should ask about the course or the assignment?” • Then, at each point • “What does a student need to know to continue?”
SAMPLE: Assignment instructions • What is the name of the assignment? • When is the assignment due? • What am I supposed to learnfrom the assignment? • What resources do I need to complete the assignment? • What should I do first? Second? . . . • How do I know that the assignment is complete?
Your Assignment • Cross out information that is not essential.
Step 3 • Put information in an orderthat will • Answer frequently asked questions FIRST • Build information
Sample Assignment • Number the components of the assignment in the order that they should be completed.
Sample assignment • Add notes for missing information
Step 4 • Write for • Accessibility • Scanning
USE Document STYLES • Heading levels • (Not format changes)
Why write for scanning • Facilitates online reading and use of screen reading software • Helps people to find information quickly • Organization assists people with attention problems
How to Write for scanning • Structure • Expectancy • Redundancy • Visibility
Structure • Answering common questions • Most important information at the top • Use headings and subheadings • Replace paragraphs with bulleted lists • Numbered lists for items • that must all be completed or • that must be done in sequence.
Expectancy • What information do your students expect to find in the document? • – don’t guess, ASK! • Where do they expect to find it? • What do they expect it to be called?
Redundancy • Put important information • in several places • Use the same cueing • for each type of item • Use images when applicable • Use multiple types of coding • – style, color, etc.
Multiple Coding Without hatching With hatching
How to Increase visibility • CONTRAST • Font • Color • Position
Large Font size • 12 Point minimum for print and online viewing • 14 point minimum for low vision, children, or older people (Over 40)
Simple Font style • San Serif • Ariel • Verdana • Serif • Times New Roman • Century Schoolbook Avoid Special Effects
Color Blindness Watch out ! for combinations that are hard to discriminate for people with color blindness
AVOID • Combinations of • RED and GREEN • Or • BLUE and YELLOW
Step 5 • Create a check list and/or a grading rubric for the assignment
Improving Printed and Online Materials Other cognitive organizers
Other Supporting materials • Transcripts • Auditory
Transcripts • From Lecture: • In today’s class we will be discussing the way that understanding our similarities and differences can benefit us in work and in our personal lives. • Before we begin, are there any questions on last week’s reading? John?
Support visual with auditory • Podcasts • Teleconferences • Screen reader readable documents