from classrooms to keyboards: teaching psychology in an online university liz clark, phd, adjunct...

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From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella, PhD, Full-Time Faculty, Graduate Psychology Alison Humphreys, MS, Adjunct Faculty, Undergraduate Psychology Nicole Bertke, MS, Assistant Chair, Undergraduate Psychology Presentation slides available now at:

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Page 1: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University

Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - ChairEdward Cumella, PhD, Full-Time Faculty, Graduate Psychology

Alison Humphreys, MS, Adjunct Faculty, Undergraduate PsychologyNicole Bertke, MS, Assistant Chair, Undergraduate Psychology

Presentation slides available now at:kappsych.wordpress.com

Page 2: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

From Classrooms to KeyboardsLiz Clark, PhDKaplan University

The Big Picture

Broad Accessibility in Underserved Areas

• 20% Military

• 40% Racial/Ethnic Minorities

• High %age in Rural Areas

• Invitations For Those With Special Needs

Page 3: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

From Classroom to KeyboardEdward Cumella, PhDKaplan University

Mentoring Students Electronically: Theses and Dissertations in an Online

Psychology Graduate Program

Page 4: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

From Classroom to KeyboardEdward Cumella, PhDKaplan University

Mentoring Research

Mentoring research is not simply an offshoot of being a researcher. It is an

area of professional practice in itself with an evidence basis and best practices.

Page 5: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

7 Steps

Confidence Building

Accompanying

Sowing

Catalyzing

SHOWING

HARVESTING

Professional Identity formation

Page 6: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Confidence BuildingAssessing student’s confidence level, building

realistic confidence

•Challenge: Newness

•Resolutions:

– Assessment: Excited, confused, overwhelmed, overconfident

– Connection

– Assurance

– Valuing

– Organization

Page 7: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Accompanying

Making a commitment to each other

•Challenge: Roles/Boundaries

•Resolution: Mentor controls the boundaries

Page 8: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Sowing

Preparing the learner before s/he is ready to change

•Challenge: No context for understanding

•Resolution: Repetition with increasing detail

Page 9: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Catalyzing

Change reaches critical level of pressure, learning escalates

•Challenge: Unexpected obstacles

•Solution: Outreach & problem solving

Page 10: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Example

• Correlation Matrix – “It’s 162 pages!”

Page 11: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Showing

Making understandable by visual or verbal example

•Challenge: Teaching statistics & APA tables

•Solution: Adobe Connect

Page 12: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Harvesting

Creating awareness of what was learned

•Challenge: Lack of context

•Resolution: Professional connections

Page 13: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Professional Identity Formation

Subtle transition from teacher to colleague

•Challenge: Lack of face to face contact

•Solution: Shifting language & interaction style

Page 14: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

ADVANTAGES OF ONLINE RESEARCH MENTORING

• The world is our apple!

• Research relevant to local communities but still generalizable– Hearing the voices of people who don’t

often get to share their views– Inspirational to local groups

• Leveraging free resources and energy around the nation

Page 15: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

THE FUTURE OF PSYCHOLOGY EDUCATION: REFLECTIONS

Broader penetration of psychology into under-represented populations

– 20% military– 40% racial/ethnic minorities– Large % live in rural areas– Many students with chronic illness and

disabilities

Page 16: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Resources

Abdallah, F., Hillerich, K., Romero, V., Topp, E. A., & Wnuk, K. (2010). Supervision of a master’s thesis:Analysis and guidelines. Retrieved from

https://www.lth.se/fileadmin/lth/genombrottet/konferens2010/42_Abdallah_etal.pdf

Brew, A., & Peseta, T. (2004). Changing postgraduate supervision practice. Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 41, 5-22.

Murray, R. (2002). How to write a thesis. Buckingham, England: Open University Press.

Scarborough, J. L., Bernard, J. M., Morse, R. E. (2006). Boundary considerations between doctoral students and master's students. Counseling and Values, 51, 53-65.

Trafford, V. N. & Leshem, S. (2002). Starting at the end to undertake doctoral research: Predictable questions as stepping stones. Higher Education Review, 35, 31-49.

Wisker, G. (2012). The good supervisor: Supervising postgraduate and undergraduate research for doctoral theses and dissertations. New York: NY: Palgrave Macmillan.

Zuber-Skerritt, O. (2002). Supervising postgraduate students from non-English-speaking backgrounds. Buckingham, England: Open University Press.

Page 17: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

From Classrooms to KeyboardsAlison Humphreys, MSKaplan University

The Benefits, Challenges, and Opportunities of Teaching

Psychology Online: The Adjunct Perspective

Page 18: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Why the Adjunct Perspective is Important

• Almost ¾ of undergraduate courses in the United States are taught by part-time or contingent faculty (American Federation of Teachers, 2010)

• Adjunct faculty members account for almost half of all faculty (American Association of University Professors, 2014)

Page 19: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Benefits of Being an Online Adjunct Instructor

• Same benefits as all adjuncts:

– Avoid politics

– Different Expectations

• Additional benefits:

– Standardized classes

– Flexibility

Page 20: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Challenges of Being an Online Adjunct Instructor

Some challenges all adjuncts face:

– No guarantee of work– Unsteady work load– No set salary/benefits – Salary and/or course load limits– No tenure– Not always consulted

Page 21: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Additional Challenges

– Professional isolation - not as many opportunities for personal connections with supervisors and colleagues

– Have to be mindful that - not everyone will understand the tone of e-mails and posts in Discussion Boards… use humor carefully

– Many online adjuncts - teach at multiple schools and/or have other jobs

Page 22: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Professional Isolation

• Attend online faculty meetings

• Volunteer for positions and opportunities outside of the classroom

• Reach out to colleagues and supervisors

Page 23: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Best Practices in Online Teaching• Check e-mail often

• Load professional photo• Post permanent announcements to the

course• Post weekly announcements• Regularly (daily if possible) go into classroom• Provide asynchronous seminars• Post grades in a timely manner • Provide specific, personalized, positive, and

constructive feedback in the Gradebook

Page 24: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Time Management

• Organization

• Efficient use of time

• Development and execution of an effective schedule

• Planned separation of professional and personal time

Page 25: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Making The Online Classroom Work

Relate to students personally Similar experiences

Time Management Manage personal and professional

obligations

Page 26: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

From Classrooms to KeyboardsLiz Clark, PhD - ChairEdward Cumella, PhDAlison Humphreys, MSNicole Bertke, MSKaplan University

The Meeting

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYu_bGbZiiQ

Page 27: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

From Classrooms to KeyboardsNicole Bertke, MSKaplan University

What Administrators Need to Know About Managing Faculty in an On-

Line Setting

Page 28: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Challenges

• Nature of discipline

• University culture – mission, goals, values

• Employee selection

• Required infrastructure and resources

(Greer & Payne, 2014; Monochehri & Pinkerton, 2003)

Page 29: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Challenges

• Legal considerations

• Managerial control

• Mentoring

• Monitoring and performance measurement

(Greer & Payne, 2014; Kurland & Bailey, 1999; Monochehri & Pinkerton, 2003)

Page 30: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Challenges

Employee isolation and communication

– Concerns over fairness– Anxiety over job security– Promotion potential– Influences on job satisfaction and

turnover

(Dahlstrom, 2013; Monochehri & Pinkerton, 2003)

Page 31: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Challenges

Employee isolation and communication– Interdependence of teamwork

– Informal information sharing or “in-place career development” and synergy

– Missed face-to-face contact and non-verbal cues

Dahlstrom, 2013; Greer & Payne, 2014; ; Kurland & Bailey, 1999; Monochehri & Pinkerton, 2003; Young, 1991)

Page 32: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Overcoming the Challenges: Monitoring and Performance Measurement

• Hiring suitable employees

• Training, mentoring, and support

• Clear expectations, goals for performance, coaching & feedback

(Schraeder & Jordan, 2011; Young, 1991)

Page 33: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Overcoming the Challenges: Monitoring and Performance

MeasurementMonitoring

– Random classroom visits

– Classroom visits (daily, weekly, or EOT reports)

Performance appraisals

– Regular meetings

– Employee engagement/empowerment

(Schraeder & Jordan, 2011; Young, 1991)

Page 34: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Overcoming the Challenges: Monitoring and Performance Measurement

Relationship-oriented behaviors versus task oriented behaviors

• Support, communication, and trust

• Responsiveness, thoroughness, and communicating to maintain connectedness

(Dahlstrom, 2013; Kowalski & Swanson, 2005; Timmerman & Scott, 2006)

Page 35: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Overcoming the Challenges: Employee Isolation and Communication

• Use advanced technologies

– Google chat or other IM options

– Google Hangout, Skype, Adobe Connect

– Community web pages (SharePoint, Google sites, Facebook, Google Community, etc.)

• Phone calls

(Greer & Payne, 2014)

Page 36: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Overcoming the Challenges: Employee Isolation and Communication

• Be accessible

• Semi-structured temporal boundaries

• Encourage collaboration and information sharing

• Regular meetings and updates

(Greer & Payne, 2014)

Page 37: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Overcoming the Challenges: Employee Isolation and Communication

• Recognizing and sharing personal and professional accomplishments/milestones

• Promoting and sharing best practices

• Brainstorm sessions

Page 38: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

ResourcesDahlstrom, D.R. (2013). Telecommuting and leadership style. Public Personnel Management,42, 3, 438-451.

Greer, T.W. & Payne, S.C. (2014). Overcoming telework challenges: Outcomes of successful telework strategies. The Psychologist-Manager Journal, 17 (2), 87-111.

Kowalski, K., & Swanson, J. (2005). Critical success factors in developing teleworking programs. Benchmarking, 12, 236-259.

Kurkland, N. B., & Bailey, D. E. (1999). Telework: The advantages and challenges of working here, there, anywhere, and anytime. Organizational Dynamics, 28, 53– 68.

Manochehri, G., & Pinkerton, T. (2003). Managing telecommuters: Opportunities and challenges. American Business Review, 21, 9-16.

Schraeder, M. & Jordan, M. (2011). Managing performance: A practical perspective on managing employee performance. The Journal for Quality & Participation, 34 (2), 4-10.

Timmerman, E., & Scott, C. (2006). Virtually working: Communicative and structural predictors of media use and key outcomes in virtual work teams. Communication Monographs, 73, 108-136.

Young, J. (1991). The advantages of telecommuting. Management Review, 80 (7), 19-21.

Page 39: From Classrooms to Keyboards: Teaching Psychology in an Online University Liz Clark, PhD, Adjunct Faculty, Graduate Psychology - Chair Edward Cumella,

Contact Information

Liz Clark, PhD [email protected]

Edward Cumella, PhD [email protected]

Alison Humphreys, MS [email protected]

Nicole Bertke, MS [email protected]

Presentation Slides Available Now At:

kappsych.wordpress.com