Emotions by Tamila EMOTIONAL DISTANCE: AFFECTIVE FACTORS IN … ·  · 2011-08-30EMOTIONAL...

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EMOTIONAL DISTANCE: AFFECTIVE FACTORS IN DL By Dr. Marina Kostina, Kendall College Emotions by Tamila

Transcript of Emotions by Tamila EMOTIONAL DISTANCE: AFFECTIVE FACTORS IN … ·  · 2011-08-30EMOTIONAL...

EMOTIONAL DISTANCE: AFFECTIVE FACTORS IN DL

By Dr. Marina Kostina, Kendall College

Emotions by Tamila

LOST IN THE CROWD

LOST IN CYBER SPACE

Marina V. Kostina

[email protected]

What

feelings

come to

mind?

By the end of this presentation you will:

Understand why emotions are often ignored by education research

Realize the power of emotions online

Recognize the common fears of online teachers

Use emotions to increase students’ success and establish your online presence

Choose your place in the Dynamic Interrelational System

Gain valuable strategies that help you promote student autonomy, increase learner success and avoid learner isolation through affective practices

Q & A

The unfortunate fate of emotions

Damasio, 1999 Plato, 428-348 BC

Cogito ergo

sum

Descartes, 17 c.

20th century

http://www.lgblog.co.uk/2010/10/asimo-and-the-future-of-robotics/

Boom, 1956

attention

participation

value

priority

internalization Gardner, 1983, 2003

EMOTIONS IN DISTANCE LEARNING

TEACHERS

Teacher’s Emotions

FEAR

Discussion

Technology

Managing

Silence

DL=

impersonal,

CMS

No risks! Be

safe!

Teacher Presence

PROJECTED EMOTION + PERCEIVED EMOTION

Use of Emotional Avatars

Dr. Ortiz (2008)

Doctorate Study:

Avatars that express

emotions-> raise

satisfaction, better for

retention of

knowledge

Your emotional self

Your personality type is related to what emotions

you express and how you express them!

Is your personality translated in the online

environment?

Your emotional teaching

Blue –Student Oriented

nurturing and supporting, thrives on being a part of the development of students’

personal and social awareness, compassionate, creates rapport with students

Green - Subject Oriented

develops the competency and intelligence of the students, creates new procedures, uses

advances in technology

Orange - Action Oriented

gives students information that is useful immediately, likes to see direct results of

teaching, creates hands-on activities & dynamic, exciting classroom atmosphere

Gold - Institution Oriented

organizes well-established routines, is dependable and consistent in classroom

management.

WHAT EMOTION WOULD

YOU PROJECT FOR YOUR

TYPE?

Did you guess my personality type?

Blue

Green

Orange

Yellow

Strategies: Ability to listen & reason You said

WHAT???

More on the negative emotions and conflict resolution online: Crisis Management Webinar

Senses emotions attention

+emotions learn

remember. functional meaningful

Repetition

Novelty

Emotion

neuronal development

- emotions no

Student Success

emotional

Attention & Retention

Click’n’Go generation (- or + emotion)

My friend’s blog:

Massaro Shoes

Students’ Emotions Online

ρ = 0.42, p <0.01

ρ = 0.40, p < 0.05 ρ = 0.46, p < 0.01

La Ganza’s (2002, 2004) Model

The Dynamic Interrelational Space (DIS) Model (La Ganza, 2004)

Q2 Q1

Q3 Q4

Critical in mind boundary

T - T +

L +

L -

Self-guided

Facilitated

STRATEGIES

Understand that DL is a VERY emotional context

Take responsibility for your own emotions (DL is a transparent environment)

First impression and presence

Use the advantages of DL to raise student emotion (remind them right away of these pluses)

Use emotions for attention and retention

Switch your role– more to affective communication than ACADEMIC!!!

Be a compassionate observer

Be willing to help

Be caring

Be genuine– interest, feelings, passion for teaching,

Develop rapport w/ students

Deal with the tension-> openly tell your students it is ok

Maintain “critical in-mind boundary”

Resources

IMAGES:

Flicker @ www.flickr .com

CONTENT

Argyle, M. and J. Dean. 1965. Eye-contact, distance and affiliation. Sociometry, 28: 289- 304.

Averill, J. 1980. A constructionist view of emotion. In Emotion, Theory, Research, and Experience Theories of Emotion (1) eds. F. Plutchik and H. Kellerman, 305-337.

Academic Press: New York.

Bloom, B. S. ed. 1956. Taxonomy of educational objectives: Book 1, Cognitive domain. New York: Longman.

Damasio, A. 1999. Feeling of what happens: Body and emotion in the making of consciousness. New York: Harcourt, Inc.

Davidson, R.J. and A. Harrington, eds. 2001. Visions of compassion: Western scientists and Tibetan Buddhists examine human nature. Oxford: Oxford Press.

Denzin, N. 1984. On understanding emotion. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Dreyfus, G. 2002. Is compassion an emotion? A cross-cultural exploration of mental typologies. In Visions of compassion: Western scientists and Tibetan Buddhists

examine human nature. eds. R. Davidson and A. Harrington, 31-45. New York: Oxford University Press.

Falk, G. 2004. Moses, the son of Mendel. Retrieved February 16, 2004 http://www.jbuff.com/c020801.htm

Frijda, N . H., A. S. Manstead, and S. Bem. eds. 2000. Emotions and beliefs: How feelings influence thoughts. Boston, MA: Cambridge University Press

Gardner, H. 2003. Multiple intelligences after twenty years. Paper presented at the American Educational Research Association. Chicago, Illinois. Retrieve

http://www.pz.harvard.edu/PIs/HG_MI_after_20_years.pdf

Gardner, H. 1983. Frames of mind: The theory of multiple intelligences. Basic Books: New York.

La Ganza, W. (2001). Out of sight – not out of mind: Learner autonomy and interrelating online. Information Technology, Education and Society 2(2), 27–46.

La Ganza, W. (2004). Learner Autonomy in the Language Classroom. (Doctorate dissertation), Macquarie University, Australia.

La Ganza, W. (2008). Learner autonomy-teacher autonomy: Interrelating and the will to empower. In T. Lamb & H. Reinders (Eds.), Learner and teacher autonomy:

Concepts, realities, and responses (pp. 63-79). Philadelphia: John Benjamins.

(for complete DL bibliography, please contact me directly): [email protected]

Questions & Answers

Summary

In this webinar we learned:

- Why emotions have not been given appropriate attention in education

- Why emotions are important in an online environment

- How DL is different from FTF-> the switch from academic to emotional support

- How to use emotions to create effective online environment that promotes autonomy, reduces isolation, and establishes your presence online

Have a wonderful emotional teaching!

PLEASE SHARE YOUR FEEDBACK!

You can share your feedback with me:

[email protected]

Suggestions for future webinars

Connect with me:

Marina V. Kostina

Email: [email protected]

Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/in/marinakostina

Blog: http://www.effectiveonlineteaching.com