and I don't know if someone said this already, but you know, I don't think these would actually be FULLY synch courses, but they would likely lean far to heavily on synch methods in an attempt to mimic land-based courses, which also aren't fully synch...
What I think we're touching on here is the need to have language and approaches for "seasoned" online educators to communicate with leadership who might not understand pedagogy, whether land-based or remote/online.
I think some #highered leaders are in panic mode, and they feel like advertising a "fully" synch fall might mitigate their enrollment challenges, when that's actually the opposite of what you want to do.
Rather than trying to force solutions, my take is that you build a kicka** online fall guided by seasoned online faculty, IDs, and faculty developers. You weave in robust online communities (there are people who are experts in this too, it's not something you throw together).
But you don't go into it saying we want to be "fully" synchronous. You don't start there. That doesn't make any sense. You go into working with the reality of a global pandemic, prioritizing lives and care, and then you let pedagogy and experts lead the way.
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TLDR: ADHD is a life-threatening condition. Systems, routines, and structures keep me alive. Ignorant critiques of these strategies are ableist. Let's do better. Happy Monday!
Faculty, staff, and students should not be left in the wind like this to wonder why this is happening. It’s infuriating tbh, and #HigherEd continues to be its own worst enemy.
We have to prioritize well-being and talk about trauma.
Okay here goes nothing. A new thread 🧵about #CourseHero.
My name's Karen, I've worked in #HigherEd for 20 years, and this is the absolute last thing I want to talk about today. But, I'm compelled in the face of what I see as immense harm being done to students.
I want to be as transparent as possible and encourage you to take nothing I say at face value. Don't trust me. Trust what you see.
To that end, here's how I've profited thus far from talking about Course Hero, for any who might wonder about my motivations. $1.19.
I don't disagree with anything in this piece. What I find really interesting is the assumption that those of us who are advocating for caring pedagogy, grounded in a balance b/t support and challenge, have at any point become less rigorous.
And that to me is the mark of #ToxicRigor. When someone points to flexibility, humanizing, and support and says, "You're dumbing things down" or "You've sacrificed rigor," there's just no evidence of that, so something else is up.