In this podcast, John Nash and Jason Johnston take public their two-year long conversation about online education and their aspirations for its future. They acknowledge that while some online learning has been great, there is still a lot of room for improvement. While technology and innovation will be a topic of discussion, the conversation will focus on how to get online learning to the next stage, the second half of life.
All content for Online Learning in the Second Half is the property of John Nash & Jason Johnston and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
In this podcast, John Nash and Jason Johnston take public their two-year long conversation about online education and their aspirations for its future. They acknowledge that while some online learning has been great, there is still a lot of room for improvement. While technology and innovation will be a topic of discussion, the conversation will focus on how to get online learning to the next stage, the second half of life.
EP 20 - Dr. Olysha Magruder from Johns Hopkins talks about their three-pronged approach to online faculty development
Online Learning in the Second Half
43 minutes 20 seconds
1 year ago
EP 20 - Dr. Olysha Magruder from Johns Hopkins talks about their three-pronged approach to online faculty development
In this episode, John and Jason talk with Dr. Olysha Magruder about the future of online education, a three-pronged approach to faculty development including JHU’s Coursera MOOC Course, and time boxing to help achieve successful outcomes. See complete notes and transcripts at www.onlinelearningpodcast.com
Join Our LinkedIn Group - *Online Learning Podcast (Also feel free to connect with John and Jason at LinkedIn too)*
Links and Resources:
Dr. Olysha Magruder is the Interim Assistant Dean in the Center for Learning Design at Johns Hopkins University and can be found here at LinkedIn
Excellence in Online Teaching Coursera Course
Johns Hopkins Excellence in Online Teaching Symposium
Beth McMurtrie on Teaching: What happens to teaching after Covid? (Chronicle of Higher Ed Paywall)
Theme Music: Pumped by RoccoW is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial License.
Transcript
We use a combination of computer-generated transcriptions and human editing. Please check with the recorded file before quoting anything. Please check with us if you have any questions!
False Start
[00:00:00] Jason Johnston: Any other questions for us before we get rolling? We'll do our normal kind of intro here, and then we'll get into the conversation.
[00:00:07] Olysha Magruder: No, no questions. I hope I don't sound too goofy, but...
[00:00:10] John Nash: No, we like goofy.
[00:00:11] Jason Johnston: Yeah, you'll fit right in! . We decided on the front end. We're just going to let it roll in that way. And I feel like john people have appreciated that
[00:00:18] John Nash: I even laugh at our own dumb intros because it's just, but yeah, we're not too stiff about it, but we have a serious topic here, but yeah, we're still humans.
Start of Episode
[00:00:27] John Nash: I'm John Nash here with Jason Johnston.
[00:00:30] Jason Johnston: Hey, John. Hey, everyone. And this is online learning in the second half, the online learning podcast.
[00:00:35] John Nash: Yeah, we're doing this podcast to let you in on a conversation we've been having for the last two years about online education. Look, online learning's had its chance to be great, and some of it is, but a lot still isn't. How are we going to get to the next stage, Jason?
[00:00:49] Jason Johnston: That is a great question. How about we do a podcast and talk about it?
[00:00:54] John Nash: I agree. Let's do a podcast and talk about it right now. What do you want to talk about today?
[00:01:00] Jason Johnston: Wait, we are doing a podcast to talk about it. That's the weird thing about our intro. We're already doing a podcast
[00:01:05] John Nash: Yeah. It's very meta.
[00:01:07] Jason Johnston: a little meta that way. Yeah. Yeah today we are going to talk with Alicia Magruder. Dr. Alicia Magruder from John Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering.
[00:01:22] Olysha Magruder: Hello, Alicia here.
[00:01:25] Jason Johnston: Did I say all that right?
[00:01:27] Olysha Magruder: tHere is one funny thing about the name of my university, which is it's named after somebody. who has a weird first name, and it's Johns. That was his name. It's very common to say John because it feels weird to say Johns, and in fact, when I originally applied for my position in my cover letter, I also said John.
[00:01:47] Jason Johnston: Oh boy.
[00:01:48] Olysha Magruder: I learned very quickly that, oops, it's a weird name, Johns Hopkins, but everything else, yes.
[00:01:53] Jason Johnston: I'm glad you, you made it through that first that first test and they were kind to you, somebody not too long ago spelled Tennessee wrong on a cover letter, hard one to look over, easy to do though, easy to do, but also a little hard to look over sometimes.
Yeah nice to have you here. So Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering.
[00:02:14] Olysha Magruder: Yes, that's right. Whiting School of Engineering.
[00:02:17] Jason Johnston: Yeah. And tell us about what you do there.
[00:02:21] Olysha Magruder: So I am the interim assistant dea
Online Learning in the Second Half
In this podcast, John Nash and Jason Johnston take public their two-year long conversation about online education and their aspirations for its future. They acknowledge that while some online learning has been great, there is still a lot of room for improvement. While technology and innovation will be a topic of discussion, the conversation will focus on how to get online learning to the next stage, the second half of life.