DESIGNING
INTERNET ASSIGNMENTS
By Dr.
Martha E. Beagle
Another school
year is upon us, and with a new year,
we look for new and innovative ways
to engage our students in the learning
process. As teachers we find it a challenge
in how to use the learning opportunities
presented by the World Wide Web. Our
classrooms are connected and our students
are savvy and clever Internet surfers.
We are always looking for ways to get
our students online and enhance what
we are already doing in our classrooms.
One good way to do that is to design
Internet assignments, also known as
web assignments.
STANDARDS
FOR DESIGNING AN INTERNET ASSIGNMENT
- Be aware of what tools are
available and how others have
employed these in teaching.
- Discover
what kinds of resources relevant
to your course topic are already
on the web.
- Consider
how these tools and resources
would enable you and your students
to do something novel, or to
do something old in an innovative
and improved way, engaging not
only for your students, but
also you as the teacher.
- Sketch
learning goals for these assignments
that are directly related to
the objectives of your course;
it will be essential for your
students to identify why they
are completing these assignments
and how they correspond with
the course as a whole.
- Ensure
that your students understand
how to use the tools you are
expecting them to use.
- Implement
outcomes assessment to see if
these new types of assignments
are accomplishing the aims and
goals.
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TYPES OF INTERNET ASSIGNMENTS
The possibilities
are infinite. A good Internet assignment
helps to focus students on an idea or
ideas that is/are important to the course
and curriculum. The student becomes
the information discoverer, examiner,
and hunter of answers to worthwhile
questions and topics. The assignment
should ask questions that take students
in uncommon approaches, using an array
of scholarly activities. Students should
be challenged to confront the specifics,
evaluate the disparities, derive inferences,
and clarify the solutions. It may be
designed so that there is more than
one answer to some of the questions
and students may end up in different
places. The key is that new learning
occurs.
Reading
Assignments
The Internet can be used in numerous
ways to assist reading assignments.
A web site can be developed and readings
posted on it. Links to readings can
be provided that can be found on the
Internet or simply provide your students
with the exact Internet addresses. Some
libraries now host e-reserves that make
published documents and texts easily
available through the Internet.
Research
Assignments
Research assignments require students
to find and review information pertinent
to a topic. Assignments may require
your students to find and/or review
text, statistics, non-print information
reserves, primary sources and documents,
laboratory results, explanations, or
other kinds of information. Library
research assistance can be helpful in
preparing and designing research assignments,
as well as providing support for your
students and the research process.
Writing
Assignments
Teachers utilize writing assignments
to encourage their students to think
logically about topics, concepts, and
practices taught within a course. After
all, it is challenging to write without
reasoning. Depending upon the type,
writing can require higher level thought
– synthesizing, evaluating, and
documenting – and sometimes requiring
research to find pertinent information
and data. Peer review can be incorporated
with a mixture of participants. Web
site publishing and communication tools
introduces a range of experiences for
encouraging the improvement of student
writing and rationalizing skills.
Problem
Solving Assignments
These types of assignments allow teachers
to create possibilities for their students
to relate acquired course material and
knowledge to real challenges. These
assignments may take on the mode of
case studies, seminars, problem sets,
or reproductions. The primary characteristic
of this assignment is that the student
must use the expertise and abilities
learned to connect with a circumstance,
problem, or event.
TIPS
FOR INCREASING LEARNING THROUGH INTERNET
ASSIGNMENTS
To help improve
Internet teaching, here are some suggestions
for getting more out of your Internet
assignments.
- Allow for student choice
on Internet assignments
Design Internet assignments that allow
students a variety of options about
the topics they research. Students
will feel some ownership to the project
and thus more motivated.
-
Go beyond fact finding on Internet
assignments
Develop tasks that expect students
to shape opinions about the information
that they find on the Internet. Equally
weigh the facts found and the opinions
or arguments developed from this.
-
Require peer to peer interaction on
Internet assignments
Ask students to share information
with one another. Lessons should be
structured that collapse the assignment
tasks into isolated pieces, forcing
students into roles that make them
accountable in completing the assignment.
-
Reverse roles with your students
Challenge your students to teach you
something that is new to you and the
topic of the assignment. Allowing
your students to take on the role
of teacher, they must now be able
to track down new information and
also be able to clarify the material
in an articulate approach. The more
questions you can ask as the teacher,
the more they need to strengthen their
information.
The World
Wide Web provides many opportunities
to introduce new ways of supporting
individual learning styles of our students
and creates new prototypes of instruction.
In order for our students to critically
use the web, we must familiarize ourselves
with good practices of judicious Internet
use, and then endorse those practices
by example and mentoring.
Web based
assignments are here to stay. They relate
to an increasingly important form of
articulation; they have a significant
motivational worth; they allow sharing
of students' work with other students;
they connect more directly to reference
sources that are also on the Internet;
and they offer a variety of innovative
means of articulation. The challenge
will be for us as teachers to set assignment
expectations that encourage the most
intellectually useful aspects of the
Internet.
Some
examples of websites that have Internet
assignments:
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