TnT: Accessible By Design – Canvas

In April of this year, the Department of Justice finalized changes to Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), establishing new requirements for universities (and many others). Critically, all website and app content, whether password protected or not, must meet Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA standards by April 2026. 

In this series of Teaching Tips we aim to provide helpful information for creating accessible content from the beginning, which will save you a lot of time and effort compared to remediating (revising, correcting, or even re-creating) your course materials later. The best part: you don’t need to be a technical wizard or accessibility specialist to create accessible materials!

This Tip focuses on creating accessible content using Canvas’s own tools. In later Tips we will go into more detail for content created using other software and applications, including documents and media.

Check it out in the most recent of our Tips ‘n Techniques series: Accessible By Design: Canvas

TnT: New in Canvas – Assigning Content & SpeedGrader Rich Content

Canvas has finally addressed a longstanding shortcoming: the inability to assign pages, modules, and ungraded discussions to  specific sections or students. This is particularly helpful for instructors who have multiple sections in one course site, but useful for all kinds of situations where differentiating content will make the student experience more understandable.

If that’s not enough, another helpful new feature: you can now use rich content formatting and even record video and your screen as part of your feedback in SpeedGrader.

Check it out in the most recent of our Tips ‘n Techniques series: New in Canvas: Assigning Content & SpeedGrader Rich Content

TnT: Intro to Trauma-Informed Teaching

Traumatic experiences, which affect many of our students whether we know about them or not, can significantly affect one’s learning, behavior, and relationships at school. Trauma-informed teaching involves understanding, recognizing, and responding to the effects of trauma on our students.

Check it out in the most recent of our Tips ‘n Techniques series: Introduction to Trauma-Informed Teaching.

TnT: Teaching Metacognitive Skills

Learning to understand and affect one’s own thinking can result in a wide range of benefits. In this tip, avoiding the theoretical weeds as much as possible, we take a practical look at what metacognitive skills are and some approaches to developing them in your students.

Check it out in the most recent of our Tips ‘n Techniques series: Teaching Metacognitive Skills.

Teaching Tips Live: Innovators & Insights – Neil Postman

Neil Postman

February 8 | 12:30-1:30p US PST | Zoom

In the third offering in Innovators & Insights, a series returning to, rethinking, recontextualizing, and reinvigorating some of the great education and technology thinkers of the past, we delve into the still-highly-relevant (and occasionally practically omniscient) work of Neil Postman, author of Amusing Ourselves to DeathTeaching As a Subversive Activity, and more.

In this active, audience-encompassing, critical discussion, we will delve into Postman’s thoughts on the problems of teaching and learning in an increasingly techno-centric culture and how we might together toward resolving them to create richer, deeper, more meaningful learning environments for our students…and ourselves.

Questions? Contact Chris Lott <clott@uw.edu>

More Information

Biography

Neil Postman (March 8, 1931 — October 5, 2003) was an American author, educator, media theorist and cultural critic, who eschewed digital technology, including personal computers, mobile devices, and cruise control in cars, and was critical of uses of technology, such as personal computers in school.

In 1971, at NYU’s Steinhardt School of Education, he founded a graduate program in media ecology.

Postman’s 20+ books include Amusing Ourselves to Death, Technopoly, and The End of Education.

Books and Ideas

The End of Education

(Note the double-meaning of the word “End” in the title)

Postman contends that the bane of modern education is the lack of common—and as often as possible, compelling—stories that give meaning to it. As Postman puts it, “public education does not serve a public. It creates a public.” Schools focus on “false gods” including consumerism and technology, for which he suggests five alternative narratives:

  • “Spaceship Earth” — “human beings as stewards of the Earth, caretakers of a vulnerable space capsule”
  • “The Fallen Angel” — “there is nothing more human than the stories of our errors and how we have managed to overcome them, and then fallen into error again, and continued our efforts to make corrections— stories without end.”
  • “The American Experiment” — The “great and continuous American argument about the meanings” of important abstractions such as “ustice, honesty, self-discipline, due process, equality, and majority rule with respect for minority rights”
  • “The Laws of Diversity” — “sameness is the enemy of vitality and creativity”
  • “The Word Weavers/The World Makers” — “Definitions, questions, metaphors—these are three of the most potent elements with which human language constructs a worldview. […] the study of these elements be given the highest priority in school, I am suggesting that world making through language is a narrative of power, durability, and inspiration.”

Amusing Ourselves to Death

From Typography to Television: “…as typography moves to the periphery of our culture and television takes its place at the center, the seriousness, clarity and, above all, value of public discourse dangerously declines. On what benefits may come from other directions, one must keep an open mind.”

Teaching and Technology: “[educators] are apt to find new methods congenial, especially if they are told that education can be accomplished more efficiently by means of the new techniques. (That is why such ideas as “teacher-proof” textbooks, standardized tests, and, now, micro-computers have been welcomed into the classroom.)”

Technology, Education, and Literacy: “Educators are not unaware of the effects of television on their students. Stimulated by the arrival of the computer, they discuss it a great deal—which is to say, they have become somewhat “media conscious.” It is true enough that much of their consciousness centers on the question, How can we use television (or the computer, or word processor) to control education ? They have not yet got to the question, How can we use education to control television (or the computer, or word processor) ? But our reach for solutions ought to exceed our present grasp, or what’s our dreaming for? Besides, it is an acknowledged task of the schools to assist the young in learning how to interpret the symbols of their culture. That this task should now require that they learn how to distance themselves from their forms of information is not so bizarre an enterprise that we cannot hope for its inclusion in the curriculum ; even hope that it will be placed at the center of education.”

On disinformation: “Disinformation does not mean false information. It means misleading information—misplaced, irrelevant, fragmented or superficial information—information that creates the illusion of knowing something but which in fact leads one away from knowing. In saying this, I do not mean to imply that television news deliberately aims to deprive Americans of a coherent, contextual understanding of their world. I mean to say that when news is packaged as entertainment, that is the inevitable result. And in saying that the television news show entertains but does not inform, I am saying something far more serious than that we are being deprived of authentic information. I am saying we are losing our sense of what it means to be well informed. Ignorance is always correctable. But what shall we do if we take ignorance to be knowledge?”

Technopoly

Education, Skills, and Technocracy: “There is no set of ideas or attitudes that permeates all parts of the curriculum. The curriculum is not, in fact, a “course of study” at all but a meaningless hodgepodge of subjects. It does not even put forward a clear vision of what constitutes an educated person, unless it is a person who possesses “skills.” In other words, a technocrat’s ideal—a person with no commitment and no point of view but with plenty of marketable skills.”

Redefining “Education”: “You will note that such a definition is not child-centered, not training-centered, not skill-centered, not even problem-centered. It is idea-centered and coherence-centered. It is also otherworldly, inasmuch as it does not assume that what one learns in school must be directly and urgently related to a problem of today. In other words, it is an education that stresses history, the scientific mode of thinking, the disciplined use of language, a wide-ranging knowledge of the arts and religion, and the continuity of human enterprise. It is education as an excellent corrective to the antihistorical, information-saturated, technology-loving character of Technopoly.”


Discussion Facilitators

Todd Conaway, Instructional Designer, UW Bothell
Chris Lott, Learning Designer, UW Tacoma

Elevate: AI – Integration (and Resistance) in the Classroom

AI generated image of instructors discussing AI with students

Please join us for a discussion featuring members of the UWT AI Community of Practice (and YOU!) focusing on real-world experiences with AI beyond policy, including their specific approaches, discussions, assignments, activities, in the classroom…and thoughts about the future.

This session builds on the information and ideas presented in an earlier Elevate session on AI and Classroom policies, but attendance (or reading the materials) is NOT a prerequisite!

Thursday, January 25, 2023 – 12:30-1:30p

On campus at UW Tacoma: JOY 113

Online via Zoom: https://washington.zoom.us/j/3988530740

[image provided by ChatGPT-4]

Teaching Tips Live: Innovators & Insights – Carl Rogers and the Person-Centered Approach

 

Teaching Tips Live - Carl Rogers and the Person-Centered ApproachCarl Ransom Rogers

In the second offering in Innovators & Insights, a series returning to, rethinking, recontextualizing, and reinvigorating some of the great education and technology thinkers of the past, we considered Carl Rogers, his person-centered approach, and how it has (and hasn’t) influenced and improved education, primarily under the rubric of “student-centered” learning.

In this active, audience-encompassing, critical discussion, we delved into Rogers’ ideas, especially student-centered learning, to explore the questions: Where are these ideas now? And where can we take them from here?

November 2, 2023

More Information

About Carl Rogers and the Person-Centered Approach

from Wikipedia:

[Rogers] was an American psychologist who was one of the founders of humanistic psychology and was known especially for his person-centered psychotherapy. Rogers is widely considered one of the founding fathers of psychotherapy research.

The person-centered approach, Rogers’s unique approach to understanding personality and human relationships, found wide application in various domains, such as psychotherapy and counseling (client-centered therapy), education (student-centered learning), organizations, and other group settings.

Discussion Facilitators

Todd Conaway, Instructional Designer, UW Bothell
Chris Lott, Learning Designer, UW Tacoma

 

 

TnT: The Tri-Campus Rubric and RSI: Part 2

The US Department of Education requires (see CFR Title 34, Section 600.2) that online learning courses “support regular and substantive interaction between the students and the instructor or instructors, either synchronously or asynchronously.” This “RSI” requirement has now been explicitly integrated with the tri-campus Rubric for Designing and Refining Hybrid and Online Courses. In this tip, we take a further look at where RSI comes into play and how it relates to some of the items noted as RSI-related in the Rubric.

Check it out in the most recent of our Tips ‘n Techniques series: The Tri-Campus Rubric and RSI: Part 2.

 

Photo by Priscilla Du Preez on Unsplash

University of Washington Tacoma | Office of Digital Learning