When I began I was very comfortable presenting to students, but was not comfortable with discussing, sharing, and presenting to my peers. I remember quite clearly the night at the end of ETAD 873 when I presented my project to my peers. I was extremely nervous as I sat through the Collaborate session waiting for my turn to be on the spot. When the time came, I ripped through my slides and then received very positive feedback from Rick and my peers. I see that as a turning point in my program and perhaps even in my life.
Evidence of the growth in my professionalism began in ETAD 873. In this course, I had Horizon School Division as a "client". We did not have an official contract, but the fact that I was creating an instructional tool for my teaching colleagues raised the bar for me. I went to great lengths to maintain professionalism when contacting teachers about the project, surveying teachers for my learner analysis, and when performing usability tests. A small example of professionalism was when I ensured that I maintained student anonymity when using my student markbooks as examples within the instructional tool.
Example student markbook maintaining anonymity |
Throughout ETAD 874, we were also responsible for creating reading reports. These reports were not only for our own personal sake, but also for our team members. As a team we were able to read many more articles than we could on our own. To make this useful for one another, we read articles, provided summaries, and explained the relevance of the articles to our project. This is a task that is common in many professional settings where co-workers depend on one another to provide overviews and summaries of reports rather than each employee needing to read every single item.
Later in the program, to complete the video assignment and final project in ETAD 803, I interviewed two University of Saskatchewan faculty members. I approached these contacts in a professional manner. If I were to have done this before my experiences in 873 and 874, I would have been extremely scared to ask these faculty members to contribute to my work, but through my growth I felt comfortable asking for their time and trust in creating videos that they could be proud of.
Other evidence of professionalism can be found in our online discussions throughout many courses. I posted my thoughts and provided constructive responses to my peers week after week. In certain weeks, I was responsible for posting the question, moderating the discussion, and providing a summary (such as the ETAD 802 summary video below).
Throughout this program, I have grown from a teacher who was comfortable in front of a classroom environment of young students to a professional instructional designer who is able to present to colleagues as part of my daily work and can also lead presentations to a room of professionals at international conferences. I am also communicate with other professionals in a more effective manner. I know that there is still room to grow, but I am a much more comfortable and confident person.