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Blog 3: Core Seminar 3 Prep Group 2

Robin’s Teaching Artifact Draft & Reflection

After meeting with the ever-sagacious Tamara, who provided excellent counsel that I stop trying to use everything but the kitchen sink, technically speaking, to engage students (okay, I’m paraphrasing), I’d like to focus on VOCAT for (1) students to annotate my asynchronous lectures and (2) enduring group work. But, I was unaware of the whole mobile-phone heavy aspect of VOCAT until last week, which has me a bit concerned. I don’t want to record my lectures into my phone and am not feeling too keen on students typing substantive annotations to one another’s work (or my lectures) over their phone (I could get over it, I guess), so, while still reeling from the positive effects of turkey tryptophan, I sent an email to the amazing CTL crew hoping for good news about a desktop computer-friendly modality. Pending that, here’s my artifact proposal for (2) enduring group work over VOCAT.

For the first two weeks, we’ll have some VOCAT warm-up exercises (self-introduction, thoughts about what might make an interesting research topic, annotate my pre-recorded lectures). In week 3, I’ll assign students to VOCAT groups based on thematic overlap in students’ research topics (= about 7 groups of 3 students each). VOCAT assignments will be hyperlinked (I hope) in our course homeroom, which is a B@B page.

Here are key parts of their research papers that I’ll be taking them through and their VOCAT analogues. I created a few of the assignments in the VOCAT course shell and will hopefully ask Christopher tomorrow how to properly set up group projects (individual and group?), enroll students to the course, and which project configuration boxes I should (not) be marking.

I guess I’m just not sure whether I’m scaffolding. I mean, I’m scaffolding the final paper because it’s broken into discrete parts…

  1. Week 1: Having introduced yourselves over VOCAT, we’re all VOCAT experts now, right? (Not!) Here’s your next VOCAT assignment, and it’s CLASS-WIDE and always interesting. Conjure two ideas or questions about human existence and/or social life: anything you’ve every wanted to know more about but never had the time to pursue. These are called me-search ideas. Post a video of no more than two minutes (set that timer!) describing human experiences that interest you and that you might like to research. Only constraint? You kinda need to be able to access people who have experienced X, Y, or Z. Comment on at least one peer’s me-search idea by viewing others’ videos.
  2. Week 2: CLASS-WIDE VOCAT: After viewing and annotating my pre-recorded lectures, you should know a bit more about the heart and soul, and mechanics, of qualitative research. So, select one of these me-search ideas and develop a research question. In a video of no more than 2 minutes, let us know what it is and how you plan on pulling it off. Comment on at least one peer’s research question by viewing others’ videos.
  3. Week 4: GROUP VOCAT: Do background research through intensive use of library resources (academic journals, census databases, etc.). Post a video of no more than (you guessed it) 2 minutes, tellings us what articles you’ve found or frustrations you’re facing finding anything! Comment on both your peers’ video reports.
  4. Week 5: No VOCAT. Write a 5-8 page (1.5 space) literature review summarizing other scholars’ research on your topic.
  5. Weeks 6-8: CLASS-WIDE VOCAT. Design your research instruments: interview schedules and surveys. Tell the class how it’s going! What article that I’ve assigned about research instruments has been most helpful–why?
  6. Weeks 9-10: GROUP VOCAT: Collect data: conduct your interviews and run your surveys. How’s it going? This is the most fun/frustrating part of qualitative research. Comment on both your peers’ video reports.
  7. Weeks 11-12: GROUP VOCAT: Analyze your gorgeous data: this is called thematic coding. Comment on both your peers’ video reports.
  8. Weeks 13-14: CLASS-WIDE VOCAT. Write and present a final paper that includes all of these elements = ~ 40 pages.

One reply on “Robin’s Teaching Artifact Draft & Reflection”

That sounds quite fun! I admire the comfortable, accessible tone you set in the instructions, and it looks scaffolded to me. Though the jump to ~40 pages at the end is a bit startling (perhaps mention along the way how many pages the survey analysis will be, etc.?). ‘Me-search’ is a great neologism for everybody’s favorite subject.

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