HyFlex and Remote Attendance Options for Graduate Instruction
Despite the push to return to in-person instruction, students want flexible learning modalities. How can colleges and universities best meet these demands?
Contributing Editor: Kathe Pelletier, Director, Teaching and Learning Program, EDUCAUSE.
Despite the push to return to in-person instruction, students want flexible learning modalities. How can colleges and universities best meet these demands?
The Extended Reality (XR) Implementation Strategy Workbook can help higher education institutions transition XR experiments from the pilot phase to broad institutional deployments by guiding them through five strategic dimensions that shape the expanded use of XR technology in educational environments.
The TMSR instructional design model with four "Ons" can be used to create effective online learning environments with collaborative project-based learning activities that help facilitate student engagement and connection.
Reflecting on AI and learning, a student offers four insights gleaned from firsthand interactions with ChatGPT.
In the age of generative artificial intelligence, how should instructors change the way they teach?
Colleges and universities often need to balance educating a great number of students with the desire to encourage interactive and engaging teaching styles. One innovative approach is learning-in-the-round classroom design.
Systems thinking and change strategies can be used to improve the overall functioning of a system. Because instructional designers typically use systems thinking to facilitate behavioral changes and improve institutional performance, they are uniquely positioned to be change agents at higher education institutions.
On this episode, we discuss ways of effectively reaching faculty and how best to facilitate a sharing of ideas about teaching with technology.
Integrating AI into higher education is not a futuristic vision but an inevitability. Colleges and universities must adapt and prepare students, faculty, and staff for their AI-infused futures.
Hybrid teaching has the potential to transform higher education. But questions remain.