Resources and Tools

Design Resources and Templates

Blended lesson design template – Outcomes, Assessments, Activities (Google Doc)

Learning Management Systems

There are numerous learning management systems out there. Your institution probably provides and supports one for faculty use.

Canvas by Instructure

Canvas by Instructure offers Free for Teachers accounts, no strings attached.

CourseSites by Bb

Blackboard CourseSites also lets teachers user try Bb Learn for free.

Moodle

Moodle Cloud offers free course web sites for teachers on their open source learning management system.

Wikis and Web Sites

Teachers can create their own web sites using free or open web sites or wiki services. Here are some examples:

Blogging

Some LMSs advertise “blogs”, but these are typically little more than glorified class journals. Real blogs are individually-owned spaces where most publishing is made available for the world. Today’s blogging platforms balance power with simplicity, making it easy for most people to get started creating and sharing. Here are a few favorites:

Forms and Surveys

In addition to formal, institutional course evaluations it’s wise to gather student feedback on your blended course via your own form or survey. We reference BYU’s Mid-Course Evaluation as one example. Here are a of free platforms you can use to design and deliver your survey:

Open Educational Resources

There are many places you can find openly-licensed resources to use in your blended course. Here are a few sites that collect or aggregate open educational resources:

Users of the Canvas learning management system can find OER directly, through Canvas Commons.

Academic and Research Journals

Many academic and research journals interested in education and technology publish articles on blended learning. Here are just a few that seem to do so regularly:

Preventing Plagiarism

Many teachers who practice authentic assessments or project based learning believe the best way to stop student plagiarism is by implementing practices that engage students in the work of learning. Here are some references:

Best Practices for Preventing Plagiarism – Webster University

Academic Honesty in the First-Year Experience – University of Sydney

An Instructional Approach to Practical Solutions for Plagiarism

More Resources

Soon after the first edition of Essentials of Blended Learning came out, the University of Central Florida began offering a MOOC on blended teaching, now available as BlendKit on their web site.

More resources to supplement the book are coming soon, so check back!