Abstract

Asynchronous workshops have potential as a flexible and accessible tool for instructor professional development. Translating synchronous workshops into asynchronous versions represents an opportunity to expand access to training materials, but translating across modalities is a challenge. As facilitators of the Colleges Online Learning Academy summer fellowship program, we outline our process for developing asynchronous workshops focused on pedagogy and digital learning for graduate student instructors. We evaluated participant engagement and accessibility based on survey responses (n=10) and workshop artifacts. Our four asynchronous workshops consisted of multimodal modules with video clips from the synchronous sessions and engagement opportunities on Jamboard. We found low Jamboard engagement from asynchronous participants, but high engagement in multimodal modules. Potential barriers to access included mental health, Wi-Fi access, English language comprehension, and a lack of discussion, but many participants (4 of 9) reported no access barriers. We provide recommendations for developing engaging, accessible, and content-rich asynchronous workshops from synchronous workshop materials.

Journal
Communication Design Quarterly
Published
2024-03-01
DOI
10.1145/3627691.3627695
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Cites in this index (3)

  1. Communication Design Quarterly
  2. Communication Design Quarterly
  3. Business and Professional Communication Quarterly
Also cites 3 works outside this index ↓
  1. 10.1016/j.compedu.2012.10.025
  2. 10.1007/s41686-020-00044-4
  3. 10.1007/s11412-020-09326-2
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