- On this Page
- Roadmap
- Requirements
- Planning
- Recommendations
Roadmap
Submit a timeline with milestones and a scope-of-work and sign a contract
Submit a completed syllabus
Develop or revise the course content in Canvas
Submit the course for review while preparing for launch
Requirements
Planning
Online courses require more upfront preparation than traditional face-to-face courses. You prepare assessments, assignments, lectures, and activities prior to the course launch. Having the content finished before the launch date allows instructors to focus on student engagement. This way instructors can plan for additional time to communicate with their students since most interactions will occur asynchronously. All of this preparation benefits the students allowing for flexible life/work/school schedules.
These four areas are a big part of the design and development process:
Learning Objectives
You can write a learning objective at any level (e.g. at the course level, at the program level, at the lesson level). Well defined learning objectives should be SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, and Time-bound). Learning objectives help keep course content, activities, and assessments aligned. They communicate the purpose and goals of what you’re trying to achieve to both students and other educators. Knowing your learning objectives will help you identify where the course needs improvements.
Assessment
You want to measure that students are, in fact, learning the material. Assessments evaluate students on what they’ve been doing. This could be an exam, a major project, or other assignment that shows student learning. You should align your assessments with the learning objective(s). It is not appropriate to grade students on things they’ve never done before (e.g. combine concepts they have not previously done or perform an activity they’ve only read about).
Content
Usually in an academic setting, students start their learning by consuming content on the chosen topic. Textbooks are commonly used for this purpose. Content can come in many forms–readings, videos, graphics, lectures, etc. You can create or curate content for your course. Through lending your expertise you are enhancing the material and making the course unique.
Practice
Students should practice applying the content in ways that are appropriate for the course. Some subjects, like programming, lend themselves very well to practice activities. Others, like understanding abstract theories, can be challenging to develop effective, engaging, and meaningful learning activities. Give students the opportunity to practice the material with ungraded assignments before expecting them to perform well on graded assessments. Provide meaningful feedback on all assessments to guide students in their learning.
Recommendations
Clear QM
Is a rubric built on four select standards based on the Quality Matters Course Review Rubric. Clear QM aids Authors and Faculty Reviewers with assessing the quality and appropriateness of the course content and related academic work of a Dev/Rev (new course development or course revision) project. Here is the rubric with instructions on how to use it. Contact the Office of Learning Design if you have questions.
Faculty Collaboration
In addition to the Undergraduate Program Coordinators or Graduate Program Director and the Faculty Reviewer, the college recommends authors discuss their course content with the following groups of faculty:
Design Consultation
The following is a list of course design and development services:
- Review and assist with course delivery requirements
- Assist with course-based planning
- Draft learning objectives and rubrics
- Organize course content in Canvas
- Design course activities for Accessibility and Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion (DEI)
Course Development and Production
The Office of Learning Design will also help with:
- Building syllabi with customized course policies
- Developing assessments with rubrics that are aligned with learning outcomes
- Development of learning activities (simulations, virtual labs, etc.)
- Planning and development of multimedia content
- Copyright questions
Attend online faculty development
All new online faculty teaching for the College of IST are expected to complete the online teaching course available from World Campus Faculty Development. Seasoned online faculty are encouraged to go through the program as well.
Familiarize yourself with Canvas
Canvas is the Penn State learning management system (LMS). Learn how to use Canvas at the online Canvas Learning Center or visit the Canvas page on this site for more resources.
If you are assigned to teach a course and have not yet been added to LionPATH, Penn State’s academic records system, you may not see the Canvas space for your course. For help with this issue, contact ist-aso@psu.edu.
Get to know your course
Course webpages, course committees, faculty leadership, and the Learning Design team can help you get to know your course. Visit the what belongs in my course page, where you can find request forms, email addresses, and guidance to complete the following basic steps:
- First, request Canvas course shells, content templates, and learning design support from the Learning Design Team.
- Second, consult course documentation to understand the intent of the course.
- Third, read the official course description in the Penn State University Bulletin.
- Fourth, connect with those who have responsibility for managing the course content; they can answer any questions.
The College of IST’s World Campus courses (those courses prepared and delivered to our students who choose Penn State’s virtual campus, World Campus–WC–as their primary campus) all have course templates from which your section will be copied. If it’s your first time teaching the course, you’ll want to go through your course ahead of time to make sure you understand what’s being covered and how it all fits together.
Meet with the course’s instructional designer and Course Committee chairperson who know the course before the start of the semester. They know the course and will be able to explain how the course runs. Refer to the Course Support page to find the instructional designer for your course.
Check with Learning Design before making changes
Instructors may make changes to content the first time they teach a course, but those changes are best limited to changing details in assignments and exams–in order to prevent common academic integrity issues. If you spot mistakes or areas that could be improved, let your instructional designer know. Not all suggestions can be implemented in the course, but they will be considered by the course author and the instructional designer.
To ensure consistency, 80% of course content must remain unchanged from the course template. Instructors may change up to 20% of the content. The course learning objectives established by the course committee must be satisfied. Please be sure to consult with your instructional designer regarding desired changes and additions.
Publish the course and introduce yourself
To publish your course, click on the Home page, then go to the upper right corner and click on Publish. Students can see the course materials after they are published in Canvas.
Once your course is published, send out a welcome announcement. This can be written in advance and scheduled via the Announcement tool.
Know important dates in the semester
- Beginning and end of semester
- Regular Drop and Regular Add periods
- Any scheduled breaks
- Final exams
Penn State’s Office of the University Registrar Academic Calendars page lists these dates and additional information.
Familiarize yourself with academic policies
Prior to the semester, review information on academic policies and procedures for actions such as academic integrity, course drops, deferred grades, and the grading system. In addition, be sure to consult information on SRTEs and syllabi.