RETHINKING ASSESSMENT FOR ONLINE LEARNING: EXPERIENTIAL, EQUITABLE, AND CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE STRATEGIES

Author(s):  
Mamta Saxena ◽  
Alice Mello ◽  
Connie Emerson
2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-334 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brittany D. Hunt ◽  
Beth Oyarzun

With Native American college matriculation on the rise and with online learning increasing in popularity, a need exists to bridge the two and to develop online learning practices that are culturally responsive. Kirkness and Barnhardt identify four principles central to American Indian education: respect, relevance, reciprocity, and responsibility. These four principles were used as the framework of this ethnographic, qualitative study, which included two Native American female students enrolled in an online course at a large 4-year University in the southeast. Results showed that students wanted supportive learning environments, Indigenous curriculum and perspectives represented online classrooms, interaction with professors and peers, and opportunities for project-based learning.


Author(s):  
Natalie Nussli ◽  
Yi Guan ◽  
Kevin Oh

The purpose of this theoretical chapter is to identify strategies that help educators develop online learning curricula to meet the needs of culturally diverse students. The first part of this chapter offers insights into culturally responsive teaching (CRT) from multiple perspectives. Specifically, the authors explore the importance of CRT in teacher education programs, how to evaluate teachers' cultural competencies, how to initiate the transformation process into culturally responsive educators, how teachers perceive the value of CRT programs, what pre-service and novice teachers typically struggle with in their attempts to teach diverse student populations, and how students perceive cultural diversity. The second part of the chapter is dedicated to an in-depth discussion of practical approaches to developing culturally responsive online curricula for both 2D and 3D learning environments, how to prepare faculty to meet the needs of diverse students in online courses, and how to stimulate pre-service teachers' reflections on CRT.


2018 ◽  
pp. 1069-1086
Author(s):  
Catherine E. Stoicovy

This chapter examines the socio-cultural contexts of Asian/Pacific islanders in a Western Pacific island to identify key components for culturally responsive online course development. A model for constructing an online learning environment is proposed using McLoughlin and Oliver's (2000) principles as design frameworks for designing a culturally inclusive instructional design that will support Asian/Pacific islanders' learning in blended courses.


Author(s):  
Catherine E. Stoicovy

This chapter examines the socio-cultural contexts of Asian/Pacific islanders in a Western Pacific island to identify key components for culturally responsive online course development. A model for constructing an online learning environment is proposed using McLoughlin and Oliver’s (2000) principles as design frameworks for designing a culturally inclusive instructional design that will support Asian/Pacific islanders’ learning in blended courses.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Glenn Fluegge

Distance or online learning is not a culturally neutral form of learning, but, like any educational approach, has been and continues to be shaped by significant historical and cultural forces. Not just what is taught, but also the means by which it is taught – the technological medium of online education – is influenced by culture and should be adjusted accordingly. With illustrations and examples pulled from the author’s experience of teaching theology in both Africa and the United States, this essay explores four “dimensions of culture” – collectivist vs. individualist, high vs. low power distance, high- vs. low-context, and oral vs. literate preference – and analyzes how students from more collectivistic, high power distance, high-context, and oral preference societies may be disadvantaged by commonly used and accepted approaches to distance/online learning. It concludes by offering some practical suggestions for adjusting online theological education to be more culturally responsive.


Author(s):  
Natalie Nussli ◽  
Yi Guan ◽  
Kevin Oh

The purpose of this theoretical chapter is to identify strategies that help educators develop online learning curricula to meet the needs of culturally diverse students. The first part of this chapter offers insights into culturally responsive teaching (CRT) from multiple perspectives. Specifically, the authors explore the importance of CRT in teacher education programs, how to evaluate teachers' cultural competencies, how to initiate the transformation process into culturally responsive educators, how teachers perceive the value of CRT programs, what pre-service and novice teachers typically struggle with in their attempts to teach diverse student populations, and how students perceive cultural diversity. The second part of the chapter is dedicated to an in-depth discussion of practical approaches to developing culturally responsive online curricula for both 2D and 3D learning environments, how to prepare faculty to meet the needs of diverse students in online courses, and how to stimulate pre-service teachers' reflections on CRT.


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