Developing Internet-Based Instruction
X331.6 (3 semester units in Education)
This course provides educators interested in using the Internet as an instructional tool with the knowledge and skills necessary to produce online courses. The theoretical foundations of Internet-based instruction and its practical applications, such as methods for student interaction, evaluation, and functional design, are discussed. By the course's end, you should know how to effectively use Internet-based instructional tools (such as hyperlinks, e-mail, newsgroups, chat, evaluation forms, graphics, and multimedia) to design, program, and publish instructional modules on the Internet.
Click below for sections, start dates, locations, instructors,
and to enroll.
Online, Enroll anytime
JOE VOLK, M.A., studied instructional technologies at San Francisco State University. He has more than 10 years of experience developing computer and Internet-based instruction, including CD-ROM-based multimedia. He has worked as an instructional designer at UC Berkeley Extension Online and at Academic Systems, and completed projects for Pacific Gas & Electric, Hewlett-Packard, the U.S. Coast Guard, and Singapore Polytechnic.
- Online course: Internet access required
- Enroll anytime: You have 6 months to complete
- $685 (EDP 877779)
Enroll
Textbook(s) for this course:
Making Instruction Work
Author: Robert F. Mager
Publisher: The Center for Effective Performance, Inc.
Edition: 2nd
Publication Year: 1997
ISBN: 1879618028