Pedagogy Processing 101: Online Professors
Posted by Sharon Cece on February 18th, 2009
Think of a professor as a symphony conductor or an army general, or even–for zen‘s sake–gatekeepers to the portal of educational enlightenment. Any way you view them, professors and their methods hold the key to understanding your courses and, more importantly, succeeding in them.
At FSU, I was surprised how my online professors (likely with the aid of web designers and tech support) created a traditional college structure from within a computerized venue. Though every instructor had a different modus operandi when it came to e-course layout, all maintained the mandatory first day attendance policy and for good reason: in addition to course introduction and familiarization, everything you need to know is presented online that first day via the syllabus.
In regard to the syllabus, this document is essential to the success of the online student. Therefore, print it, copy it, save it, decorate your bathroom walls with it, hang it from your rearview mirror…I’m being facetious but the point is clear: the syllabus is the most effective piece of material the professor will provide in meeting your course requirements. One or two professors offered it as the only material needed for the entire course; more often, textbooks–sometimes with or without study guides and accompanying CD’s–are required. A few professors augmented all of the above with additional websites, links and yet more materials such as supplemental books of reference. These materials, with very few exceptions, were always sufficient in meeting course goals.
Online instructors usually post their content on the course discussion site and the students respond with questions and comments which are answered in a threaded format. Professors almost always hold e-office hours in the event you need to meet with them individually, or arrange virtual classrooms whereby the entire class could get information in real time. Questions are also fielded by TA’s, who are available a bit more than the busy professor. Email responses are arbitrary depending on the professor; if you’re fortunate you get an immediate answer but ususually it’s a day or more later. Information you require that is course-specific is best posted online publicly so that other students can add to the discussion; personal information (i.e.– you need to re-take a test or make up course work) should be emailed privately to the professor.
If you can bear one more metaphor, think of professors as snowflakes–no two are alike. Get to know each instructor, what materials they require and specifically what he or she expects from you as a student. You will be amazed at how much time and energy this will save you.
A small but essential piece of information to advance you to the portal of educational enlightenment.
Tags: course materials, Florida State Online, FSU online program, Online Instructors, Online Materials, online professors, professor 101
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February 18th, 2009 at 10:17 am
Sharon,
This is valuable advice. I couldn’t agree more. The professor is the one giving your grade and it’s important to know if they are judging you on grammar and spelling as well as content/sentence structure. I have had both kinds. As soon as they correct a mispelled word or change the verb form, I make sure future papers follow suit. Why distract them from the content (the real stuff) by forcing them to make additional comments on your paper. It might mean a higher grade. Plus, it teaches you to produce better future presentations of documents.
February 23rd, 2009 at 12:48 pm
Thank you, Marie. This is especially true with online programs, whereby the professors don’t get a chance to meet and speak with their students face-to-face and so, coursework is usually an exclusive representation of the student. Knowing precisely what the professor is emphasizing, whether it be stellar writing and grammar or daily online attendance or even just submitting those three papers per course, will eliminate much superfluous effort on the student’s part.