Flexible Hybrid Format in University Curricula to Offer Students In-Subject Choice of Study Mode: An Educational Design Research Project

In a digital era where people may experience seamless control in determining their interactions with the world via analogue and digital modes, this paper challenges the need for a university-determined position on whether study need be designated as on-campus, online, or a predetermined mix of each....

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of university teaching & learning practice Vol. 17; no. 3
Main Authors Colasante, Meg, Bevacqua, John, Muir, Stephen
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published University of Wollongong 01.01.2020
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Summary:In a digital era where people may experience seamless control in determining their interactions with the world via analogue and digital modes, this paper challenges the need for a university-determined position on whether study need be designated as on-campus, online, or a predetermined mix of each. In a university in Australia, several subjects were designed in a flexible hybrid format where students were offered flexibility to create their own learning pathway via online or on-campus mode, changing as it suited and regardless of their original enrolment mode in the subject. The curriculum model was conceptualised and deployed using educational design research, involving three designed and taught subjects and a further two designed-only subjects (i.e. not yet taught) to help test the concept in contrasting contexts. Insights on the new model were gained from participating teachers, their students, and online analytics. Using the experiences of the trial as the basis of this discussion paper, one practical step and its related challenges are shared in working toward a hybrid pedagogy, with associated design principles extrapolated.
ISSN:1449-9789
1449-9789
DOI:10.53761/1.17.3.9