Monday, September 30, 2024

GSOLE Principles and Tenets revision presentation at CCCC 25 in Baltimore

Since its founding in 2016, the Global Society of Online Literacy Educators (GSOLE) has continued to grow and evolve, expanding its membership, initiatives, and offerings.

A key example of this evolution has been a recent effort by the GSOLE leadership (you can see current leadership here) to revise GSOLE's Online Literacy Instruction (OLI) Principles and Tenets, which were approved and published by the GSOLE Executive Board on June 13, 2019. Somehow, over five years have passed since our group developed these initial guidelines for OLI.

In education generally and literacy/writing specifically, much has changed since June 2019, and many of those changes, especially pandemic-related online learning and now the impact of AI, need to be examined in terms of the way we approach OLI. 

I'm part of this revision effort, and a hardworking group mainly broke up the work into subcommittees to evaluate how the Principles and Tenets might change. My subcommittee focused on AI.

We just learned of the acceptance of our proposal for CCCC 25 in Baltimore to present both the results of this work as well as the process we took to get there. We'll be eager to share the way that what we believe were fundamentally sound--they really are!--initial Principles and Tenets have adapted in the face of major changes in the landscape of OLI.

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Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Kairos publication: "OWI—A Future of Challenge and Possibility"

I was fortunate to work with ten talented colleagues as part of the recently published multimedia interview project "OWI—A Future of Challenge and Possibility" in Kairos (1).

This innovative publication placed experienced online writing instruction (OWI) teacher-researchers in dialogue with each other about key questions in the field.

Initially, project leaders Jason Snart and Jessie Borgman asked each "author" to post a question in a brief 20-second or so audio and/or video. Snart and Borgman helped matched each question with another participant, who responded with a lengthier audio, video, or text.

Adding another layer, a different contributor then had the option to provide a short reply to each question's response.

Snart and Borgman encouraged free play among the ideas from the beginning, communicating via email that even if the questions the 11 of us initially drafted were not used as written, they "bet the ideas will re-emerge as our question-answer conversation builds, not to mention the very late stage of everybody having another chance to come in and do new replies or comment on comments, etc."

The result is an overlay of thinking and commentary, a web-like representation of knowledge creation that well suits OWI.

It is also the kind of unconventional publication that is characteristic of the OWI mind, and I was glad to have been a part of it. Check it out.

Note

1) Issue 28.2. In addition to Snart and Borgman Jennifer Cunningham, Natalie Stillman-Webb, Joanna Whetstone, Heidi Skurat Harris, Casey McArdle, Cat Mahaffey, Lyra Hilliard, and Mary Stewart.

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Wednesday, January 26, 2022

Fifth annual GSOLE conference this Friday

This Friday, January 28, the Global Society of Online Literacy Educators (GSOLE) will be conducting our fifth fully online annual international conference, "Visions and Sites of Online Literacy Education."

Conference Co-Chairs Cat Mahaffey and Tess Evans--who are also GSOLE Board Members--have assembled a terrific event, again providing an excellent opportunity for the many people interested in online learning in general and online literacy education (OLI) more specifically to gather and discuss the opportunities and challenges of online education. GSOLE is now a 500+ member-strong organization!

It's a full-day affair with over 70 presenters, as you can see in the conference program. GSOLE President Dan Seward provides a short welcome video and tour, and already available is a Praxis Poster Hall. The conference features seven concurrent sessions and plenaries by Central Michigan's Troy Hicks and the University of Florida's Laura Gonzalez. Links to all of these events will be activated on Friday. You can follow the activity and discuss your experiences using #gsole2022.

You can still register, and this event is designed to be user-friendly on the wallet: It costs $10 for GSOLE members and $5 for students and contingent faculty GSOLE members. 

This year, we're grateful to the University of Houston-Downtown Master's Programs for sponsoring our conference, and I hope attendees take a look at their programs.

GSOLE is constantly improving and evolving. Listen to Dan's welcome message to hear how the conference is responding to trends in online learning and how GSOLE is connecting both new and old voices to chart the next paths in OLI.

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Monday, March 30, 2020

GSOLE crisis support for remote writing instruction

Many of you have experienced the recent upheaval of having to convert/migrate your courses into remote formats.

A few weeks ago the Global Society of Online Literacy Educators (GSOLE) began building resources and support for teachers and schools faced with sudden CoVID-19-related campus closures. Little did we know that that would soon mean almost everyone.

GSOLE now has available a robust set of materials to help:
  • The Just In Time Hub is a gateway to our various resources, including those below as well as excellent written materials to help you think through course conversion/migration. This material has continued to be updated: www.glosole.org/justintime.html
  • Just Ask GSOLE provides a direct link to discussion forums moderated by GSOLE online writing/literacy instruction experts who can answer your specific questions: www.glosole.org/justaskgsole.html
  • Walk-In Webinars is a direct link to live Zoom sessions hosted by GSOLE members. Every week, the schedule of facilitators is listed there along with specific topics: www.glosole.org/walkinwebinars.html
Specific questions can be directed to JustAskGSOLE@glosole.org. You can also follow GSOLE on Twitter @gsoleducators for updates on GSOLE's efforts and visit our general website at www.glosole.org for other material and information.
We have been chugging away for about three weeks with this project, and it is important that I share with you the names of the people behind this effort. Following are the primary contributors, including their role in GSOLE and institutional affiliations:
  • Amanda Bemer, Webmaster, Southwest Minnesota State University, is facilitating our interfaces and communications.
  • Collin Bjork, Member, Massey University-New Zealand, is facilitating Walk-in Webinars.
  • Amy Cicchino, Executive Board At-Large Member and Affiliates Chair, Auburn, is coordinating and curating many of the Just-in-Time resources.
  • Jenae Druckman Cohn, Webinar Co-Chair, Stanford, talked with me about the initial ideas for our response and is helping coordinate the Walk-in Webinars.
  • Jennifer Cunningham, Member, Kent State, is facilitating Walk-in Webinars.
  • Kevin DePew, Certification Committee Co-Chair, Old Dominion, is facilitating Walk-in Webinars.
  • Miranda Egger, Executive Board At-Large Member, University of Colorado Denver, is coordinating and moderating the JustAskGSOLE email and message board questions.
  • Tess Evans, Secretary, Miami University of Ohio, has contributed to the Just-in-Time resources.
  • Brendan Hawkins, Florida State University, has contributed to the Just-in-Time resources.
  • Lyra Hilliard, Member, University of Maryland, is facilitating Walk-in Webinars.
  • Cat Mahaffey, Treasurer, University of North Carolina Charlotte, is facilitating Walk-in Webinars.
  • Kim Fahle Peck, Communications and Membership Chair, York College of Pennsylvania, is coordinating the social media communications for this effort.
  • Dan Seward, Vice President, Ohio State, developed the Just-in-Time web presence and interface and is the point person for maintaining it.
  • Jason Snart, Online Literacies Open Resource Editor, College of DuPage, is facilitating Walk-in Webinars and has helped with our communications.
  • Mary Stewart, Webinar Co-Chair, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, has created the schedule and plans for the Walk-in Webinars is facilitating Webinars
  • Natalie Stillman-Webb, Member, University of Utah, is facilitating Walk-in Webinars.
  • Jessi Ulmer, Executive Board At-Large Member, Texas Tech University, has contributed to the Just-in-Time resources.
I’m really glad that the resources and support that this group has provided have been useful to members of our professional communities, and we're going to build on these materials as we  continue what for all of us are untrodden educational paths.

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Tuesday, January 28, 2020

GSOLE's annual online conference this week!

This Friday, January 31, the Global Society of Online Literacy Educators (GSOLE) will be hosting our third annual fully online conference, "Visions and Sites of Online Literacy Education."

This event brings together a range of professionals interested in online literacy education (OLI). The conference portal is ready to go, which includes the conference program, the Virtual Poster Hall, and a short welcome video message by the GSOLE president, yours truly. These links will provide you with plenty of helpful information about how to participate in the conference and get the most out of the experience.

There's still time to register, and you can purchase an individual or institutional registration here. Individual registrations include a year membership to GSOLE, and $150 institutional registrations include:
  • One-year GSOLE membership for the institutional point person (the individual making the purchase through the Cart feature).
  • Local meeting-room access (single room) for onsite colleagues through the point person's login (allows participation in one session at a time).
  • Free remote conference access for all other GSOLE members at the institution (a list of member usernames must be provided).
  • Five individual remote conference logins for non-GSOLE members at the institution (names and contact information must be provided prior to the conference date to allow login setup.)
We're especially grateful to PowerNotes for sponsoring this year's conference, and I hope attendees take a moment to check them out.

The conference has several new-and-improved elements that I describe in the welcome message, and we're looking forward to connecting this Friday.

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Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Publishing in OLOR: Sharing strategies for teaching writing and reading online

On July 1st I became President of the Global Society of Online Literacy Educators (GSOLE), succeeding my good friend Beth Hewett. GSOLE is a hard-working group of scholars and practitioners, and since our launch in spring 2016 we have accomplished a lot to support teaching and research in online literacy instruction.

Many people who would or do teach writing and reading online are looking for practical strategies to help them. GSOLE has a tremendous resource for this purpose: OLOR: Online Literacies Open Resource. This online, peer-reviewed journal, created and edited by another good friend, Jason Snart, is a place that online teachers share their practices and strategies. From the site: "The goal of the OLOR is to publish relatively brief and practical pedagogical strategies. Busy online literacy teachers can read an OLOR publication and, within a few days, try out a strategy out for themselves."

OLOR submissions are designed to be a from-reading-to-course type experience, and not only is the content created with this goal in mind, but so is the way that content is presented: Short, user-friendly, multi-media articles.

The published pieces are organized around the Effective Practices for Online Writing Instruction from the NCTE/CCCC 2013 Position Statement of Principles and Example Effective Practices for Online Writing Instruction.

We are encouraging online literacy teachers to submit materials to OLOR. Already published have been pieces on asynchronous conversations and community, screencast feedback, and using blogs in an OWC. 

Check out OLOR, and consider publishing. In addition to sharing your practices, it can help you join a community of like-minded educators who care about helping students learn more effectively online.

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Friday, September 30, 2016

GSOLE: Can we think about it all as literacy?

So I’m posting two consecutive “organizational” posts, but there’s a lot going on in the world of OWI, and I want to get it out there.

It’s not every day that you get to be part of a new organization/society/ association. This past April at the CCCC meeting in Houston, I was honored to take part in the launching of GSOLE, the Global Society for Online Literacy Educators.

GSOLE is the brainchild of my good friend Beth Hewett, and she is our first president. She has developed this idea that OWI should be broadened beyond writing to literacy, including reading and digital composition. From her letter on the homepage (https://www.glosole.org/):

We are an international organization of teachers, tutors, and researchers dedicated to diversity, inclusivity, and access in literacy-based online education. We share an understanding that the key component linking all of online education is literacy. Although online education tends to remove the immediacy and intimacy of face-to-face instruction, we suggest that successful teaching and learning in online settings are more deeply connected to literacy-based concerns than to physical presence or lack thereof. Three of the core literacies of the 21st century are reading, writing, and digital composition. However, these literacies largely have been studied and taught separately, and the resulting discussions about them have occurred in discrete sub-disciplines where their connections have not been fully explored or acknowledged.
Reading. It gets left out of so many higher ed conversations about learning. We assume students can/should be able to do it or don’t have the expertise to teach it or are too embarrassed to admit we don’t do it well & etc. I am this term again teaching The Peer Reader in Context, the Drexel course that prepares undergraduates to tutor in our writing center. I love our text, Bartholomae & Petrosky's Ways of Reading, which, in its introduction, asks students to focus on their practices and assumptions about reading. Textbooks, they write in that introduction, "are good examples of books that ask little of readers outside of note-taking and memorization" (5). (1) Reading in college is often simply transparent.

Digital composition. While those in the field of comp/rhet have written and investigated multimodality and digital composition for some time, you could argue that alphabetic writing still dominates, not only in pedagogical practice but in what we think of as composition or writing instruction.

The idea behind GSOLE is to bring together writing and reading instruction with digital composition under one inclusive, virtual tent. As I suppose with any new thing, we spent a heck of a lot of time developing the name. We are still developing the organization's structure. We know we will have Webinars and a certification sequence for OWTs. We will have a journal. We will also, through our site, provide an opportunity for developing a community of those interested in online literacy education. We have, in my estimation, the right people involved to get it all done.

GSOLE is exciting because what we’re hoping is the idea of literacy can move to the forefront of OWI conversations. It's not so much that OWI will become OLI by nomenclature, but that our pedagogical and research agendas will reflect this broader concept of literacy. We think this is the future, and we hope you will join us.

Note:
1) I still like the 9th edition of this text.

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Monday, July 18, 2016

From OWI Committee to Standing Group, but the work goes on

In April at the CCCC meeting in Houston, the CCCC Committee for Effective Practices in OWI was settling in at 9 AM for its three-hour, packed-agenda annual closed meeting, when its members abruptly learned a surprising thing: Just that Wednesday, the CCCC Executive Committee had voted not to reconstitute us!

This was a tough moment for many committee members, and emotions were visceral for a variety of reasons. We called CCCC President Joyce Carter, who showed great leadership in coming to visit us on the spot. She fielded questions and explained her approach as Chair – a new approach – to committees, and she described the logistics of what had happened. She apologized for the way this occurred, reinforced the value of OWI work, and encouraged us to re-structure the OWI Committee as a CCCC Standing Group.

I do understand it all. Nobody at CCCC was out to get our committee. As many of you know, our committee had gone well beyond the boundaries – all for the good, of course –of a charge-driven, purpose-focused group. Specific, executable charges, Joyce explained, are what should characterize committees and structure their work. Groups with ongoing interests and work need a different structure. This makes sense.

Word of this has trickled out, so I wanted to let people know that our group has been speedily reconstituted as a CCCC Standing Group. CCCC was helpful fast-tracking our group’s application. Our Expert Panel, comprised of more than 30 OWI experts, and our structure are still intact. Our numerous in-progress projects will continue on, especially the OWI bibliography, spearheaded by Heidi Harris, and the survey of student experiences in OWCs, led by Diane Martinez.

I think this moment also helped people think about some of the other new sites for community, conversation, and contact for OWI teachers and scholars, especially The OWI Community, a growing Facebook site set up by Casey McArdle and Jessie Borgman, and the recently formed Global Society for Online Literacy Education, which I'll be talking more about here soon.

For our group, the name changes, but the work goes on. With the Standing Group, we will still have a clear structural connection with CCCC and NCTE. Such a visible, tangible presence is especially valuable to those of you those investing your careers teaching, administering, and researching OWI, people who often need not only a recognizable banner under which to gather to think, talk, and work, but an identifiable gathering “spot” to become life-long friends.

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