Archives April 2020

remote teaching

Remote teaching: you are amazing!

Speaking to my teacher colleagues about their first months of remote teaching brings me back to when I flipped a course and later taught it entirely online.

In the classroom

Imagine this; you teach science, anatomy and physiology to be exact. You have microscopes neatly lined up in the cabinets, slides labeled, organs properly stored, pencils and chalk in easily accessible places. You find yourself getting a little anxious. The students are due any minute now. What will your classroom look like at the end of the day?

Can you relate? It was hard to make a transition in the classroom from being the “sage on the stage” who shared my knowledge and my teaching supplies with students to a “guide on the side.” The parents and students seemed to think it was my responsibility to fill their brains with knowledge.

The flipped classroom

Using technology helped. I moved lectures to short 15-minute explanations and posted them online. This practice freed up all the classroom time for… Initially, that thought was a little scary. What am I going to do with 30 students for an hour each day?

I hoped to bring a sense of wonder back to my classroom. The initial phase of letting go was challenging. I had to trust the students to get what they needed out of the materials I supplied. To be completely honest, the classroom was messy some days. The noise could be deafening. Every student did not rise to the challenge.

However, most students stepped up remarkably. Students started coming after school to help set up labs and to design their own labs. One student volunteered to be a laboratory assistant. She came every day after school to organize and clean supplies.

Certainly, there were still students and parents who complained that because I did not lecture, I did not teach. However, as many students became more self-sufficient, I had more classroom time to help those who needed additional guidance. I watched and listened to the students in their groups every day. Identifying areas that required learner support and determining how best to build that support became my new role. Trying to be flexible, inclusive, and keep the learning focused on the students and their needs, I structured my evaluations on whether the objectives were met, not how they were met.

We discovered that education is not something which the teacher does, but that it is a natural process which develops spontaneously in the human being. -Maria Montessori

Online

The next step was to move to a completely online course. My panic grew as I realized how little of the educational process I would be able to control. How did I know if the students read the material, listened to the lectures, submitted their assignments, or took their tests without outside assistance?

Teacher on computer: remote learning
Image by Mohamed Hassan from Pixabay

I had a weekly synchronous session spent on discussing case studies and asking “what if” questions. These sessions were required unless you had an emergency. However, the students knew about the sessions when they signed up, in contrast to the students in the current emergency online courses.

The question of grades

It did not take long to get a sense of who knew and understood the material and who did not. I gradually moved all graded content to discussion boards, submitted case reports, and videos arguing points or outlining procedures. I found that this method correlated best with the grades I would have assigned based on the synchronous sessions. It also provided more ways for students to express their grasp and understanding of the subject content. It was an opportunity for me to see that if I got out of their way, the students would be creative, enthusiastic learners.

Not a complete break from tradition

To make sure that everyone came to the synchronous sessions prepared. I had a test bank of questions based on the reading. Students had to score 80% or higher before the online session. They could take it as many times as they wanted. I am sure some randomly guessed and then wrote down the answers. It does not matter as long as they knew these key points. Case studies and videos were also due before the session started.

What you did while remote teaching is amazing!

Many of you had to make your transition to remote teaching in days. You did not get the luxury of a gradual, well-thought-out transition. You had to divest from the need to control, amp up the use of technology, and design new ways to present and test in an unpredictable environment.

Please do not think that your experience is representative of online courses or online education. What we have experienced is unprecedented and hopefully will never reoccur. When you have time to breathe again, consider what aspects of teaching can best be done in the classroom and what parts can best be done online. If you do, your future students will benefit significantly from this experience born of necessity.

You were there for your students. You helped keep them safe. You used technology to establish a sense of community, a community of learners in a time of unexpected emergency remote teaching. You were creative problem solvers who improvised on the fly.

upload to Wordpress

Storyline to WordPress: Upload and publish

Are you building your portfolio? Articulate Storyline is a rapid development tool for eLearning, and WordPress is an open-source content management system that many of us use to organize and display our websites. A common question I get is, “How do you get your Articulate Storyline modules up on your WordPress site.” In this blog, I will publish an Articulate Storyline module to the web and show you two ways to get it into WordPress. There are probably other ways, but this way does not require any plugins.

Publish Storyline Module

Publish your Storyline module to the web. Next save your file as a zip file.


Uploading to File Repository

There are two options for uploading your file to the file repository for your website. The first is to use the file manager for your web host, and the second is to use Articulate Storyline’s FTP transfer. I use HostGator for my web host. I have logged into their customer site and navigated to my file manager. There are plugins for WordPress that make it possible to log into File Manager from your website dashboard. I tried one of these, and it crashed my site. So I prefer to go directly to the file manager.


Double click on your file manager and you will see the file structure for your website. Open the public.html folder.


Creating a Folder for your module

Your Articulate Storyline module will have multiple subfolders. You will want to upload it as a zip file to make sure all of the subfolders stay together. Eventually, you will unzip it. To keep your file structure organized, create a separate folder for each Articulate Storyline module. To create a folder in File Manager, select the + folder option.


Choose a name for your folder. Make it simple, but unique, so your file structure is easy to follow.


There is now a folder named “Sample” in my public_html folder.


Use FTP to Transfer the Articulate Storyline file from your computer to your Web Server

The first way to transfer your file is via FTP from Articulate Storyline. Your server is your website address. Use port 21. Your username is the username for your web server, such as Hostgator. The password is your web server account password. Your directory is the file path you just set up. Mine is /public_html/Sample/ Test the connection next. Send the file to the Web Server.


Upload Articulate Storyline Folder Directly into the File Manager

The other option is to go directly into the file manager of your web server and upload a zip file to that folder. I created a second folder called “sample.”  I find this option is more manageable because sometimes the FTP transfer drops a file.


Select upload a file.


Drag and drop the zip file or select the file and upload it.


The file is now uploaded. Select go back to return to the root file “sample.”


Next, select your zip file in its folder and choose extract.


The default is to extract it into the same folder, which is what I do. Then I delete the zip file.


Use an Application

Another option is to use a WordPress application to upload and embed your Storyline content such as this one by Brian Batt.

Embed your Storyline file.

The next step is to embed your Storyline file on the page of your choice. If you right-click on your story_html5.html file, you will get the file path for your Storyline file.


You could use the word press page builder or the Elementor page builder- whichever you choose, select add an HTML code, and then add your code as below. Notice my file path is my website followed by the file path that does not include /public_html

<iframe src=”https://ltpcreativedesignllc.com/sample/story_html5.html” width=”780″ height=”558″></iframe>


Select preview to view your HTML and make sure that it appears as you expect.


Do you need help with your file upload?