@seanmichaelmorr
"Meatspace"? I love it!
I love your arguments concerning the current state of of teaching/learning, and especially so in light of the resistance we sometimes generate when trying to encourage faculty to try something the new.
As you stated, much more eloquently than I could, "we are all already hybrid"! Sometimes the jargon that we use gets in the way of what we are trying to accomplish, and adds a new level of "strangeness" to a topic someone might already be jittery about. I have been teaching online a very long time, and my first online courses were hybrid, because my goal was to "flip" the delivery around to provide more time for interaction and hands-on activity during the f2f sessions (meatspace
). So years later I was very surprised when everybody was extolling the virtues of the brand new "flipped" model for instructional delivery - I had already been doing that for more than ten years!
I have many instructors who want nothing to do with learning management systems and online teaching, and yet they use an exhaustive list of internet sites they want their students to visit, web-based tools they want their students to use, are constantly searching for better stand-alone grading and gradebook apps, looking for lecture-capture options, are budgeting for electronic whiteboards, send their students to the library to research topics using the library's web-based tools, etc., etc., etc. They are all already hybrid, but for some reason that term makes them think of a secret fraternal brotherhood with a wildly complicated secret handshake and decoder ring!
Thank you for articulating this so well.
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