- About
- Inquiry Support
- Seminar Series, Workshops, & Programs
- SoTL 101: Introduction to SoTL and Teaching + Learning Inquiry
- SoTL 102: Formulating an Inquiry Project
- Tools for Inquiry: Conducting Inquiry Using CES
- Amundsen Fellowship Program
- Decolonial Teaching + Learning Seminar Series
- Decolonizing and Indigenizing Curricula
- Disrupting Colonialism through Teaching Program
- Exploring Well-being in Learning Environments: An Integrated Seminar Series + Grants Program
- Inquiring into Your Multilingual Classroom: An Integrated Seminar Series + Grants Program
- New Ways of Teaching, New Ways of Learning: Supporting Learning in Online Environments
- Open Education Grant Pilot Program
- Teaching and Learning Development Grant Program
- Project Final Report Archive
- Amundsen Fellowship Program
- Dewey Fellowship Project: Sarah Johnson
- Dewey Fellowship Project: Robert Krider
- Dewey Fellowship Project: Jamie Mulholland
- Dewey Fellowship Project: Michael Filimowicz
- Dewey Fellowship Project: Kathleen Fitzpatrick
- Dewey Fellowship Project: Lisa Papania
- Dewey Fellowship Project: Juan Pablo Alperin
- Dewey Fellowship Project: Marek Hatala
- Dewey Fellowship Project: Chantal Gibson
- Amundsen Fellowship Project: Leith Davis
- Amundsen Fellowship Project: Tara Holland
- Amundsen Fellowship Project: Dara Culhane
- Disrupting Colonialism through Teaching Program
- Exploring Well-being in Learning Environments Program
- Inquiring into Your Multilingual Classroom Projects
- New Ways of Teaching, New Ways of Learning
- Amundsen Fellowship Program
- Conferences, Calls for Papers + Proposals
- Academic Integrity in Distance and Open Education - Edited Collection [Deadline: February 28, 2025]
- CAPLA's Recognition of Prior Learning in Rural Spaces: Call for Proposals [Deadline: February 28, 2025]
- UBC Graduate Students in Teaching Conference Call for Proposals [Deadline: March 3, 2025]
- Dialogically Relational Leadership (Growing Together in, as, with, for, and through SoTL) [Event date: March 19, 2025]
- Elon University 21st Annual Teaching & Learning Conference: Call for Proposals [Deadline: March 21, 2025]
- 2025 Scholarly Writing Retreat Conference [Deadline: May 1, 2025]
- For Research Personnel
Encouraging and Supporting Discussions Through Online Annotations
Grant program: Dewey Fellowship Program
Grant recipient: Juan Pablo Alperin, Publishing Program
Project team: Alice Fleerackers and Esteban Morales, research assistants, and Remi Kalir, University of Colorado
Timeframe: May 2018 to June 2019
Funding: $6000
Description: Seminar courses are predicated on the notion that students learn by critically reading a text, and subsequently engaging in discussions with their peers and with the instructor. This project seeks to expand on this practice by bringing discussions about assigned texts online with an online annotation tool, Hypothes.is.
I have now successfully piloted online annotations using Hypothes.is in six of my own courses over four years and would like to encourage others to do so as well. In the Fall of 2016, I formally researched students’ use and perceptions of annotations with the support of a Teaching and Learning Development Grant (G0172) to get a better understanding of how annotations can improve learning outcomes. This study pointed to the value and challenges of encouraging annotations in the classroom.
As a Dewey Fellow, I hope to accomplish two things. First and foremost, I wish to recruit faculty from across the university to encourage the use of online annotations in the classroom. Second, I will collect data from annotations made by students, from the add-on notification system, and from surveys to study the practice of online annotations. As a result, I will be in a position to study how annotations are used in a diverse set of classrooms that span multiple disciplines and practices. I hope to use my observations to provide recommendations of how annotations can best be used to help students engage critically with texts and with each other in ways that puts them in charge of their own learning.
Questions addressed:
- What value did students find in annotating?
- What is the student experience of annotating? How do they think it changed their experience of the course?
- What motivates students to annotate?
- What are the different types of annotations and annotators?
- Does learning happen through the annotations?
- How do different types of courses and set-ups affect the ways students perceive annotations and their practices?
Knowledge sharing: If possible, it would be ideal to set up a series of daytime talks at the three campuses to share the experiences of using Hypothes.is.
There has already been interest from other faculty members within the Publishing Program, and I believe it would be of interest to many social science and humanities programs, or any course that critically engages with written materials.