New Educause Resource Offers Multimodal Learning Strategies

Higher education IT association Educause has released a new resource to help educators and IT leaders navigate changing learning modalities and better serve student needs. Part of the association's Showcase Series, "Online, In-Person, or Hybrid? Yes" pulls together reports, lessons learned, and other materials that align with the corresponding Top 10 IT Issue for 2023.

Among the best practices offered are five teaching enhancements that "worked their magic on remote teaching and learning during the pandemic and are continuing to be used to improve the student experience today":

  • Collaborative technologies;
  • Student experts;
  • Back channels;
  • Breakout rooms; and
  • Supplemental recordings.

"The adoption of technology is advancing our capacity to offer an increasingly digitized and flexible learning experience for students, which is exciting, because this flexibility can support increased access for students who may not otherwise have the opportunity to pursue higher education," commented Kathe Pelletier, director of Educause's Teaching and Learning Program. "Even more promising is the recognition that teaching practices matter: The intentional design of learning environments, assessments, and opportunities for students to connect with the material, their instructor, and their peers can make all the difference in the ways that students feel seen and valued and ultimately achieve their learning and personal goals."

Educause's next Showcase, "SaaS, ERP, and CRM: An Alphabet Soup of Opportunity," will launch on July 31. To view the entire Showcase Series, visit the Educause site.

About the Author

Rhea Kelly is editor in chief for Campus Technology, THE Journal, and Spaces4Learning. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • closeup of person wearing abstract smart glasses

    Google Unveils Android XR Smart Glasses, Powered by Gemini AI

    More than a decade after the commercial failure of Google Glass, Google is returning to the smart-glasses market, this time betting that advances in artificial intelligence, miniaturized hardware, and conversational computing can turn wearable devices into a mainstream platform.

  • circuit patterns

    Anthropic Launches Lower-Cost Claude Sonnet 5

    Anthropic has released Claude Sonnet 5, positioning the model as its most autonomous mid-tier offering to date and a lower-cost alternative to its flagship Opus 4.8 system. The company said the model can plan multi-step tasks, operate tools such as browsers and terminals, and complete agentic work at a level that previously required larger and more expensive models.

  • Student classroom scene with diverse learners attentively engaging in lecture, using laptops

    The AI Literacy Gap No One Expected

    While Gen Z may be advanced at generating quick outputs or using free LLMs for surface-level tasks, they need to develop critical thinking, communication, and analysis skills.

  • abstract cybersecurity data protection

    Rubrik Intros Google Workspace Data Protection

    Rubrik has announced the launch of Rubrik Data Protection for Google Workspace, a product the company said is designed to help enterprise customers protect data and restore operations across Google Workspace environments.