Traditional professional development models are an inefficient (and ineffective) means of supporting adjunct faculty teaching online courses. The challenge lies in expanding the scope and focus of programming to meet the needs of a diverse faculty body comprised of full-time, adjunct, face-to-face, and online faculty. Key factors in this shift involve: changing the culture of adjunct faculty, increasing engagement in the university community, promoting investment in professional development initiatives, scheduling, access and scalability of initiatives.
To promote growth and development in these key areas, the Online Teaching Showcase (OTS) was created to provide a forum for the scholarly exchange of best practices in virtual education. Designed to foster instructional effectiveness, OTS features experienced online faculty sharing strategies that optimize learning and engagement in the online classroom.
Unique to OTS is the online, time-limited, asynchronous nature of interactions that provide a forum for professional exchange
not limited by the traditional conference confines of time, location or funding. As such, OTS attendees and presenters have the flexibility to login to the conference showcase at their own convenience, download or archive select presentations, and view presentations with respect to specific interests. The 2011 Online Teaching Showcase can be viewed at:
http://cirt.gcu.edu/teaching/ots/2011ots
The goals of the Online Teaching Showcase are:
- To enhance the quality of online instruction through the dissemination of effective teaching strategies.
- To encourage scholarly dialogue about best practices in online instruction and assessment among faculty teaching online.
- To increase awareness of the range and diversity of innovative instructional and assessment strategies available in the online classroom.
OTS presentations include both an audio and visual component, but there are no formal requirements concerning the technical format or the media utilized to create the presentation. As such, presentations formats include: videos, audio-narrated PowerPoints, video-supplemented PowerPoints, PDF with embedded audio/video supplements, Voicethreads, and similar structures that allow for a combination of visual and auditory communicative strategies.
Each presentation is allowed 10 minutes. Presenters also provide a 1-page handout for download by conference attendees, 150-word presentation abstract, 100-word author bio, and .jpg author photo. Conference attendees are able to view all presentations, comment, and download handouts via the Internet.