Tag online education

Accessibility

Checking Your Website for Accessibility

Web Accessibility Evaluation Tool

I just recently finished revising my website and was ready to check it for accessibility. I used the web accessibility evaluation tool (WAVE) powered by WebAIM. This tool is free to use. The first step is to enter your web page address.

WAVE web accessibility evaluation tool where user enters web address.

After you enter your website address, you will get a summary listing the errors, contrast errors, alerts, features, structural elements, and aria elements. Selecting the view details button at the bottom of the summary section provides details on the errors. The errors on my landing page included a linked image missing alternative text, missing form labels, two empty buttons, and five empty links.

Error List

The next step is to select each of the error messages to get more information on the errors. Three of the empty links are my social media links in the top bar of my website. The top bar has three social media icons for Twitter, LinkedIn, and email. A user can click on any of these links to complete the action in the icon. However, if you have low vision, you would not know what the icons are and, therefore, would not know the correct usage. To make this accessible, you must add titles to the social media icons.

Social media icons for Twitter, Linked In and email.

The other two empty link errors are for the hamburger menu icon and then close the menu icon. On my website, I chose to have a menu with titles in the top bar and the hamburger menu for use on smaller screens.

The next set of errors to evaluate are the missing form labels in the MailChimp sign-up form. There are two errors: a missing form label in which a form control does not have a corresponding label and an orphaned form label.

Two form errors in a Mail chimp newsletter subscription form.

I checked the CSS style changes I made to see if I had inadvertently deleted the label. This was not the case. I then looked at my “contact me” form. This form had the same errors. The problem seems to be that the text explaining the purpose of the box cannot be inside of the box. I also noticed that there is low contrast between the text in the “enter your email box” and the background. I will change this text color to meet accessibility contrast requirements.

Low Contrast Errors

Blog posts illustrating low contrast text.

On my blog page, I initially had low contrast errors in the author and date fields for the individual fields. I fixed those with CSS. However, I still have errors for low contrast in the sidebar text. To fix those errors in a Google Chrome browser, right-click on the offending text and select “inspect.”

HTML and CSS detail on website element.

After identifying the class for the blog post info, date and comments, I added the CSS to change the text color from gray to black.

.oceanwp-recent-posts .recent-posts-info {color:black}

.oceanwp-recent-posts .recent-posts-comments a {color:black}

If you need to check contrast for text color or when creating images, another option is to use the WebAIM contrast checker. The minimum acceptable contrast ratio is 4.5:1 except for large text, which should be at least 3:1, incidental or decorative text and logotypes.

Headings

You can then select the structure tab on the WAVE tool to evaluate the overall structure of your website.

Notice that my website has a header and a navigation menu, but no H1 header for the overall page. There are a series of H2 headers throughout the webpage and H4 headers on the footer. H3 headers are found in the individual blog posts. To make the webpage easier to navigate, WAVE recommends adding an H1 header for the website.

Accessibility Summary

The web accessibility evaluation tool is straightforward to use. Errors, contrast errors, alerts, features, structural elements, and aria elements are all identified. Selecting one of the icons brings up a details page where information about the error can be found as well as suggestions on how to fix it. I was able to resolve all of my alternative text errors, structural errors, and contrast errors. I was not able to fix the errors associated with my forms. Though I suspect if an additional label were added outside of each text entry box, the error would be resolved.

Book

Andragogy

In the book The Adult Learner by Knowles, Holton III, and Swanson (2015), the theory of andragogy is proposed and explained. Pedagogy, or the way children are taught and how they learn, is described first. Pedagogy is based on the assumption that the teacher is the instiller of knowledge and that children are the receivers. The teacher is the single responsible party for education. The authors state that teachers of children must thoroughly understand how children learn and what techniques are necessary for them to get the most out of their education. Knowles et al. (2015) felt that expertise, though a different kind, is required when teaching adults as well. The teacher assumes the role of facilitator and provides a safe environment for adult learners to participate in more active, self-directed learning.

Knowles et al. (2015) six primary assumptions include the following:

The need to know: The teacher determines what children need to know, but adults are used to making their own decisions, prioritizing their goals, and determining what is the best use of their time. To have adults “buy-in” to education, they need to know what will be taught, why it is essential, and how it will benefit them in their daily life. On the flip side, they need to understand the ways they will be disadvantaged if they do not learn the content or skill (Knowles et al., 2015). Like most adult activities, learning is most successful for adults if they are encouraged to share in choosing which learning strategies will be utilized.


Adults have experience: Children come to a classroom with a lack of life experiences, and they must be assisted in learning how to file or consolidate the new material they learn. Careful scaffolding must be supplied by the teacher to allow the student to progress. Knowles et al. (2015) contrast this with adults who have a lifetime of experience. By its nature, this leads to much greater heterogeneity in the adult classroom. Knowles et al. (2015) said that effective adult learning requires the ability to tap into these experiences as a resource and make learning an experience in itself. A lifetime of expertise contributes to an adult’s self-concept. The authors feel that ignoring this expertise devalues the adult learner. Adult learners may not need careful scaffolding of knowledge. They can consolidate or make mental models and file information with their lifetime of experiences (Knowles et al., 2015). 


The learner’s self-concept: Knowles et al. (2015) point out that adults have developed the ability and responsibility to make their own decisions, which leads to their autonomy. This ability to make decisions and the consequences of the choices they make lead to their developing self-concept. To have another tell them what they need to learn and how they would learn it best is antithetic to this. According to Knowles et al. (2015), sometimes adults are used to the learning experiences being what they remember from grade school, and frequently they will assume the passive role of “learner.” Helping adults understand that they need to apply the same decision-making abilities that they use in their life to their education helps them move from dependent to self-directed learners (Knowles et al., 2015). On the flip side, denying a self-directed adult the ability to make decisions on how they learn best will thwart learning as well.


Readiness to learn: Knowles et al. (2015) stress that the learning experience is the richest and most beneficial for an adult when it is timed, when an adult is ready to learn it. Adults understand that knowledge can be powerful and can help them in their social and work life. For this reason, they are more inclined to participate in learning that contributes to their personal or work goals. Pratt (1988) provided a model explaining why adults may be comfortable and self-directed in their learning in one circumstance, but require direction and support in another. 


Orientation to learning: Knowles et al. (2015) feel that adults want to learn how to complete a task or to solve a problem instead of learning organized by subjects. In addition to timing the learning well, it needs to be practical and to have real-life applications. Studies have shown that people learn math concepts best when they are taught in terms of everyday math problems, and language is best absorbed if the learner is taught the words that they will need in their daily life (Knowles et al., 2015). 


Motivation to learn: Knowles et al. (2015) say that adults can be motivated to learn something from a motivator outside of themselves, but the most influential motivators are internal. Concepts like improving self-esteem, quality of life, and job satisfaction are strong motivators for adults. Putting andragogy into practice requires preparation, though a different kind than teaching children. Adult learners must be told what they can be expected to learn, as well as realistic expectations of how they will learn the content and then apply it.

Andragogy in Practice

Knowles et al. (2015) stress that a climate must be collaborative, respectful, and warm. Adults must be welcomed into learning and must feel that they are safe. Adults learn best if they are motivated to learn, and the content is timely and applicable to real life. To develop the content, the learner and instructor should collaborate on what needs to be taught, the needs to be addressed, and the objectives of the course. Learning activities must be active, experiential, and logically sequenced. Finally, the course must be evaluated by both the instructor and the learners on how well it meets the learner’s needs. 

If learning for adults is structured in this way, it can lead to better retention as well as completion rates for adult classes. If instructors structure a lesson as a collaborative experience and assume the role of co-learners seeking feedback and encouraging two-way communication, they are more likely to be successful as an instructor (Knowles et al., 2015). 

 Applying the Principles to Giving Feedback

Need to know: Medical students need to understand how to provide and receive feedback. On a recent survey completed by both faculty and students, the ability to give and receive feedback was one of the top learning goals identified. Students need to understand how to provide appropriate feedback to their instructors, realize that receiving feedback is how they will grow in their clinical skills, and learn effective decision-making skills.

The student’s evaluations, which strongly contribute to their success or failure at obtaining the residency of their choice in the specialty they desire, depending on their ability to evaluate and learn from feedback successfully. Explaining to the medical students how faculty and students contributed to choosing the topic will help get buy-in for participation. Students are told that it was a mutual decision on what objectives were selected, and careful consideration was made that they are relevant and essential to their medical student career.

Learner’s self-concept: Medical students are adult learners. They are responsible for their own lives and learning. Their patients will depend on their medical knowledge and clinical decision-making skills. They are autonomous and feel comfortable that they know what they need to learn. Ask students to think of a previous experience where their inability to give or receive feedback effectively was detrimental to their home or work life. This question will help them see why it is essential for them to learn more about feedback, its purposes, communication styles, and under what terms feedback should be given. 

Role of learner’s experience: We have all received feedback throughout our life. We have a wealth of knowledge to draw on when considering when feedback was given effectively and when it failed miserably. Case studies are used for students to draw on their experiences, incorporate their new knowledge, and evaluate how they will give feedback in the case study scenario. An assessment at the end of the training video will review the technique so that all learners are prepared to participate in the case studies. 


Readiness to learn: Students have been provided feedback in the way of grades throughout their educational careers. This practice continues through medical school. The need to score high on their exams as well as have excellent clinical skills summaries motivate students to learn how to both give and receive feedback well. A student who is resistant to feedback and does not want to improve or change or one that provides inappropriate feedback to their preceptors will not only run the risk of scoring low on their clinical assessments but also be a danger to patients. 


Orientation to learning: Explaining the strong correlation between improvement in their clinical skills and their clerkship comments or evaluations and then subsequently their Medical School Performance Evaluation should provide a strong external incentive to want to learn how to give and receive feedback effectively. The desire to improve communication skills, deliver bad news, and encourage growth and change in their future patients will provide internal motivation to learn how to provide feedback in a way that strengthens relationships. 


Motivation to learn: Knowles et al. (2015) say that adults can be motivated to learn something from a motivator outside of themselves, but the most influential motivators are internal. Concepts like improving self-esteem, quality of life, and job satisfaction are strong motivators for adults. 

people working in a group

With the internet, do you think there is still a difference between the way adults and children learn?

References

Knowles, M. S., Holton III, E. F., & Swanson, R. A. (2015). The adult learner (8th edition). New York, NY: Routledge.

Pratt, D.D., and associates (1988) Five perspectives on teaching in adult and higher education. Malabar, FL: Krieger.

Online Education: Trend or Fad?

Original post date on online education, June 2018

Whether you are a student or faculty member, you may be starting to consider taking or teaching an online course. Online education seems to be the trend in education, especially higher education, but it is filtering down to the K-12 environment as well. Online education is here to stay!

Online education and technology are doubtless going to change how we learn in the years ahead. Remote learning is inexpensive and brings down the cost of near-universal access. — Andrew Yang

The move to online education

What are the drivers of this trend? In my opinion, the biggest driver was initially financial. As more and more schools are increasing their number of online courses and technology is catching up, other schools are seeing the benefit and feeling the pressure to add their own as well. Whether it is massive open online courses (MOOC) or full graduate degrees, learners have more options than ever before.

According to Allen and Seaman (2016), in 2014, there were 5.8 million distance education students with 2.85 million taking all of their coursework in a distance learning format. Approximately 70% of leaders of public institutions feel that investing in online education is critical to their strategic plan. You may ask, how do faculty feel about the value of online coursework? Allen and Seaman (2016) report that about 30% of faculty accept the importance of online education and feel it is a legitimate form of education, approximately 55-60% are neutral, and nearly 15% disagree with it being a legitimate form of education.

So, what makes a course online?


Traditional course                     No online content
Web Facilitated Course             1-29% online
Blended or Hybrid Course       30-79% online
Fully Online                                 80% or more

Do faculty like online education?

Group of people talking with tablet computers.

When talking with faculty members, you notice that, whether positive or negative, their opinion on online education is strong. As a faculty member who has taught online courses and as an M.B.A student who has recently completed an online program, I have some thoughts on why? There is such a wide range of teaching methods for online courses. Some courses are merely voice-over-PowerPoint with a 10-question set of recall questions at the end of each unit. Students in these courses quickly learn what they need to do to find the answers to the recall questions. There is little to no conversation between students or between students and faculty. Students achieve their desired grade after learning the requisite amount of work required and get little from the class. After the initial setup time, the course can run on autopilot semester after semester, with no faculty involvement.


On the other end of the spectrum are courses set up to take full advantage of the technology and the expertise of the faculty. These courses have required reading and perhaps voice-over lecture PowerPoints, but these are merely to provide the background for the rest of the course. The bulk of the course is made up of writing assignments, discussion boards, case studies, and required online class meetings where students and faculty discuss the content and ensure understanding.

Many students have commented that the online environment makes them more comfortable talking and providing their opinion and perspective than a traditional course would. Instead of a 10 question recall question, full use of technology is used to make sure that a fair assessment is provided that assesses critical thinking skills and understanding of the content instead of the ability to look up an answer—more on technology and assessment in a later post.

Should you take an online class?

Should you take an online course? If you are unsure, try one of the MOOCs first, such as the ones offered by EdX and Coursera. These massive courses will give you an idea of whether an online format will work for you at little to no cost. With the number of students involved, be aware that there may be little faculty involvement and that the majority of the discussion and help with the content will come from your fellow learners.

If you like the format and you find you are motivated to stay on top of the content, then online learning may be for you. As you look for courses, pay particular attention to whether there are required meeting times, a discussion board with faculty involvement, writing assignments, and a description of the testing method. The testing method should show the faculty is aware of the pitfalls of testing online and has made an effort to make sure the tests are as fair as possible.

Woman sitting at a computer.

Are you ready to move your courses online?

I can help!

References

Allen, I. E., Seaman, J., Babson Survey Research, G., & Quahog Research Group, L. (2016). Online Report Card: Tracking Online Education in the United States.