Transparency as a Policy
Establish Your Presence Early
Create a video to expand upon the course and what students to expect in your class. Use an Introductory Module as a place to set expectations, relay information on the syllabus, and share resources students will need to use to complete the course. Post announcements and participate in discussions.
Use transparency to pull back the curtain on the hidden curriculum. Be exceptionally clear about how you expect your students to engage with course materials, fellow students, and you in your class. Provide context for activity and assignments, including why students are learning particular content, as well as why the particular activity and assessment serves their learning.
Clear Expectations
Take an opportunity to allow your students to orient themselves to your course. Describe how much effort you expect from the students on discussion posts, assignments, reading, and so on. Describe the tools they need to complete various assignments. Describe for students what “good work” looks like in your course. Break learning in to smaller, manageable chunks and establish a pattern of activity and due dates.
Learning Objectives
Alignment Matters! Be sure that your course content aligns with objectives and assessments. In an online setting, it is absolutely acceptable to offer more frequent, low-stakes assessments. Aligning these assessments with course module outcomes provides a clear pathway to student learning. Any extra content offered that does not directly support learning objectives can be included in an additional resources area, or left out completely.