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Tips for Teaching an Effective Online Course (with Good 
      Student Achievement and High Student Satisfaction)   

                    Michael Campbell 10‐9‐09 

1) Introduction   
   a) A study I did demonstrated about equal learning and 
       student satisfaction in online and onsite sections of Acct 
       233 Principles of Accounting I. 
   b) I have taught these accounting courses online: Principles 
       1 & 2, Intermediate 1 and Governmental Accounting.  
       Student satisfaction has been high. 
   c) I chair the department.  We have 20 full time and 10 
       part‐time faculty.  I get all the student complaints. 
   d) The purpose of this presentation is to mention some 
       specific methods that have resulted in good outcomes 
       for student learning and student satisfaction in online 
       accounting courses. 
   e) Plan for the presentation:  Course setup, Before the 
       course begins, Course operation, End of course activities 
        
2) Course setup.  Course set up is much more time consuming 
   for an online course.  Proper course setup can reduce 
   instructor time required during the course.  
   a) Modules and content items. 
   b) Use of Announcements or News items. 
   c) Consider a Syllabus Quiz to ensure students know the 
       basic “rules” of the course. 
   d) Personal Introduction Threaded Discussion. 
   e) I use two Chats – Initial and before Exam 1.  Students 
       really appreciate these chats. 
   f) Homework & solutions.  Put specifics about assignments 
       in only 1 place—the syllabus or course schedule.  In 
       content items, ask students to refer to the course 
       schedule for specific assignments and due dates.  This 
       will allow you to change assignments in only 1 place . 
   g) Create exams using exam pools. 
   h) I give Sample Exams & solutions, and students earn 
       points for the Sample Exams. 
   i) Use publishers’ online resources.  No need to duplicate 
       these in the course shell, e.g., narrated Ppt, Quizzes, etc. 
   j) Consider ways to engage students in the course. 
i) Chats, especially the first chat. 
      ii) Threaded discussions (TDs).  (I have not used these 
           much except for personal introductions and student 
           questions segregated by Chapter.) 
      iii) Group activities.  Consider making the group work 
           mandatory if you decide to use groups.  Voluntary 
           groups have not worked well for me. 
       
3) Before the course begins 
   a) Set access dates for assignment solutions, quizzes, 
      exams, etc.  Hide things you don’t want students to see. 
   b) Send emails before the course starts with Syllabus and 
      homework schedule and any special information the 
      students may find useful before the course begins, so 
      there are no first day surprises.  Must use students’ 
      preferred email addresses, since they won’t have access 
      to the course yet. 
   c) Post initial announcements/news items , e.g., “How to 
      take this course”, “Initial things to do”, etc., that will be 
      available the first day of class. 
   d) Depending on your system, you may be able to use 
      announcements from previous semesters and just set 
      new dates on announcements so they will appear 
      automatically when students are working on specific 
      areas or assignments.  This worked well in eCollege. 
 
4) Course operation 
   a) Recognize that some students are likely to encounter a 
      variety of issues early in the semester, from computer 
      and other technical problems, to not receiving their text 
      book on time.  Allow flexibility early in the course. 
   b) Send lots of emails.  Put the course number in the 
      Subject area, e.g., Acct 233.  Ask your students to do the 
      same.  Depending on your system you may want to set 
      up a folder to capture these emails.  This will provide a 
      separate area for a record for the whole course. 
   c) Copy the whole class on most emails that you send, 
      including responses to student questions, and consider 
      also posting them as Announcements/News items. 
   d) Review some homework and provide some feedback.  
      Consider using a tablet PC for this.  I also print papers, 
make my comments, scan them and email back the 
     paper with my comments. 
e)   Consider using homework manager or similar software.  
     It has worked OK.  I am working on getting the import 
     grades feature set up. 
f)   Make solutions available the day after assignments are 
     due.  Tell students frequently that this is one method you 
     use to provide very detailed feedback, but it requires 
     some effort on their part. 
g)   Encourage students to call or email with questions, and 
     respond very quickly.  I often respond immediately. 
h)   Make interaction with students positive and 
     encouraging.  Student dissatisfaction often seems to 
     have resulted from the attitude or expectations of the 
     instructor or failure of the instructor to communicate 
     promptly or frequently with students. 
i)   Answer all student questions respectfully and 
     completely, even when they should know they answer.  
     Avoid telling students just to read the text or to read the 
     announcements or course syllabus.   This type of 
     response probably will not get the student response the 
     instructor wants and it may dampen students’ 
     enthusiasm for the course and the instructor. 
j)   Allow flexibility, e.g., drop the lowest 3 homework 
     scores, quizzes, etc.  Allow people to submit assignments 
     late and even take exams late if they have reasonable 
     excuses. 
k)   Recognize that students may encounter a variety of 
     problems on exams, especially on the first exam, so be 
     flexible.  Let students know about possible problems and 
     how to handle them, e.g., a windstorm disrupts Internet 
     service during an exam, the Internet will time students 
     out after 25‐45 minutes of no activity while they are 
     taking an exam.  Use exam pools to create exams that 
     will be substantially different for each student. 
l)   If you are teaching an onsite section of the course, create 
     an exam for the onsite section by using the exam pool 
     created for your online course. 
m)   If you are concerned about cheating, consider requiring a 
     proctored exam, perhaps the comprehensive final exam.  
     Put this possibility in your course syllabus and be ready 
     to assist students in finding a proper proctored situation. 
n) Let students know that exams will be open book, open 
      note, but set time limits on exams after which the exams 
      close automatically.  Or, assess a penalty if additional 
      time is excessive.  Let students know the policy.  
   o) Consider quizzes.   Maybe use them as means to help the 
      students learn the material as opposed to evaluation 
      instruments.  Consider giving twice as much time as 
      necessary on the quizzes and even encouraging students 
      to look up answers if they need to. 
   p) Find ways to get students to use the learning aids at the 
      text publishers’ websites.  Consider some type of 
      incentives (points??). 
 
5) End of course activities 
   a) Encourage students to complete the course assessment.  
      Must coordinate this with when the assessment form will 
      be made available to students, because they may have 
      only 1 opportunity to complete the course assessment. 
   b) Provide course‐to‐date score information well before the 
      final exam, so students know exactly where they stand.  
      May need to prepare a separate grade book in an Excel 
      spreadsheet to allow for dropping some of the 
      homework and quiz scores.  May need to email separate 
      Excel spreadsheets to each student to provide only his or 
      her information. 
   c) For students that do well in the course, send them an 
      email to let them know they did well and might want to 
      consider accounting or ??? as a major and offer to meet 
      with them to discuss it. 
       
6) Comments 
   a) Create the course to make it doable for the instructor 
      given the available resources, constraints, enrollment, 
      etc.  I created a lot of work for myself this.  
   b) The keys are to be respectful until it hurts, respond 
      quickly and find ways to demonstrate that you are 
      actively participating in the course.  I do 2 chats, do 
      frequent emails and announcement posting and respond 
      immediately to student emails.  Other faculty do 
      frequent threaded discussions with feedback or do 
      extensive feedback on numerous assignments. 

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Tips For Teaching an Effective Online Course, CAMPBELL

  • 1. Tips for Teaching an Effective Online Course (with Good  Student Achievement and High Student Satisfaction)    Michael Campbell 10‐9‐09  1) Introduction    a) A study I did demonstrated about equal learning and  student satisfaction in online and onsite sections of Acct  233 Principles of Accounting I.  b) I have taught these accounting courses online: Principles  1 & 2, Intermediate 1 and Governmental Accounting.   Student satisfaction has been high.  c) I chair the department.  We have 20 full time and 10  part‐time faculty.  I get all the student complaints.  d) The purpose of this presentation is to mention some  specific methods that have resulted in good outcomes  for student learning and student satisfaction in online  accounting courses.  e) Plan for the presentation:  Course setup, Before the  course begins, Course operation, End of course activities    2) Course setup.  Course set up is much more time consuming  for an online course.  Proper course setup can reduce  instructor time required during the course.   a) Modules and content items.  b) Use of Announcements or News items.  c) Consider a Syllabus Quiz to ensure students know the  basic “rules” of the course.  d) Personal Introduction Threaded Discussion.  e) I use two Chats – Initial and before Exam 1.  Students  really appreciate these chats.  f) Homework & solutions.  Put specifics about assignments  in only 1 place—the syllabus or course schedule.  In  content items, ask students to refer to the course  schedule for specific assignments and due dates.  This  will allow you to change assignments in only 1 place .  g) Create exams using exam pools.  h) I give Sample Exams & solutions, and students earn  points for the Sample Exams.  i) Use publishers’ online resources.  No need to duplicate  these in the course shell, e.g., narrated Ppt, Quizzes, etc.  j) Consider ways to engage students in the course. 
  • 2. i) Chats, especially the first chat.  ii) Threaded discussions (TDs).  (I have not used these  much except for personal introductions and student  questions segregated by Chapter.)  iii) Group activities.  Consider making the group work  mandatory if you decide to use groups.  Voluntary  groups have not worked well for me.    3) Before the course begins  a) Set access dates for assignment solutions, quizzes,  exams, etc.  Hide things you don’t want students to see.  b) Send emails before the course starts with Syllabus and  homework schedule and any special information the  students may find useful before the course begins, so  there are no first day surprises.  Must use students’  preferred email addresses, since they won’t have access  to the course yet.  c) Post initial announcements/news items , e.g., “How to  take this course”, “Initial things to do”, etc., that will be  available the first day of class.  d) Depending on your system, you may be able to use  announcements from previous semesters and just set  new dates on announcements so they will appear  automatically when students are working on specific  areas or assignments.  This worked well in eCollege.    4) Course operation  a) Recognize that some students are likely to encounter a  variety of issues early in the semester, from computer  and other technical problems, to not receiving their text  book on time.  Allow flexibility early in the course.  b) Send lots of emails.  Put the course number in the  Subject area, e.g., Acct 233.  Ask your students to do the  same.  Depending on your system you may want to set  up a folder to capture these emails.  This will provide a  separate area for a record for the whole course.  c) Copy the whole class on most emails that you send,  including responses to student questions, and consider  also posting them as Announcements/News items.  d) Review some homework and provide some feedback.   Consider using a tablet PC for this.  I also print papers, 
  • 3. make my comments, scan them and email back the  paper with my comments.  e) Consider using homework manager or similar software.   It has worked OK.  I am working on getting the import  grades feature set up.  f) Make solutions available the day after assignments are  due.  Tell students frequently that this is one method you  use to provide very detailed feedback, but it requires  some effort on their part.  g) Encourage students to call or email with questions, and  respond very quickly.  I often respond immediately.  h) Make interaction with students positive and  encouraging.  Student dissatisfaction often seems to  have resulted from the attitude or expectations of the  instructor or failure of the instructor to communicate  promptly or frequently with students.  i) Answer all student questions respectfully and  completely, even when they should know they answer.   Avoid telling students just to read the text or to read the  announcements or course syllabus.   This type of  response probably will not get the student response the  instructor wants and it may dampen students’  enthusiasm for the course and the instructor.  j) Allow flexibility, e.g., drop the lowest 3 homework  scores, quizzes, etc.  Allow people to submit assignments  late and even take exams late if they have reasonable  excuses.  k) Recognize that students may encounter a variety of  problems on exams, especially on the first exam, so be  flexible.  Let students know about possible problems and  how to handle them, e.g., a windstorm disrupts Internet  service during an exam, the Internet will time students  out after 25‐45 minutes of no activity while they are  taking an exam.  Use exam pools to create exams that  will be substantially different for each student.  l) If you are teaching an onsite section of the course, create  an exam for the onsite section by using the exam pool  created for your online course.  m) If you are concerned about cheating, consider requiring a  proctored exam, perhaps the comprehensive final exam.   Put this possibility in your course syllabus and be ready  to assist students in finding a proper proctored situation. 
  • 4. n) Let students know that exams will be open book, open  note, but set time limits on exams after which the exams  close automatically.  Or, assess a penalty if additional  time is excessive.  Let students know the policy.   o) Consider quizzes.   Maybe use them as means to help the  students learn the material as opposed to evaluation  instruments.  Consider giving twice as much time as  necessary on the quizzes and even encouraging students  to look up answers if they need to.  p) Find ways to get students to use the learning aids at the  text publishers’ websites.  Consider some type of  incentives (points??).    5) End of course activities  a) Encourage students to complete the course assessment.   Must coordinate this with when the assessment form will  be made available to students, because they may have  only 1 opportunity to complete the course assessment.  b) Provide course‐to‐date score information well before the  final exam, so students know exactly where they stand.   May need to prepare a separate grade book in an Excel  spreadsheet to allow for dropping some of the  homework and quiz scores.  May need to email separate  Excel spreadsheets to each student to provide only his or  her information.  c) For students that do well in the course, send them an  email to let them know they did well and might want to  consider accounting or ??? as a major and offer to meet  with them to discuss it.    6) Comments  a) Create the course to make it doable for the instructor  given the available resources, constraints, enrollment,  etc.  I created a lot of work for myself this.   b) The keys are to be respectful until it hurts, respond  quickly and find ways to demonstrate that you are  actively participating in the course.  I do 2 chats, do  frequent emails and announcement posting and respond  immediately to student emails.  Other faculty do  frequent threaded discussions with feedback or do  extensive feedback on numerous assignments.