Starting point:

The seminar is a mandatory course that has to be taken by bachelor students in the second or third study semester and is usually undertaken with no prior knowledge of Dutch-speaking literature.

For the students the seminar - in accordance with the SPO (study examination regulations) - provides not only the first and only systematic overview of periods, genres and groupings of Dutch literary history, but is, as a rule, their first contact with literary texts emanating from the Dutch language area.  

A special challenge - especially with a view to older texts - are the at this early study stage the not fully well-developed foreign language skills.


Formalities

  • This seminar is half of a semster-overlapping module and connects to te introductory course "Literature analysis". 
  • The forms of active participation are, in accordance with the current SPO, "seminar discussions, preparatory reading of relevant academic texts, individual as well as group presentations (oral/written), e-learning based self-learning phases".
  • 2 weekly hours face-to-face, on a weekly basis 4 hours of preparatory and follow-up work (5CP).
  • The complete module is completed with a term paper that focuses on one of the module parts, as a rule the introductory course.

Aims of the blended learning concept:

  • Even though the SPO describe sthe course as a "seminar", it usually has - due to the immense content (the entire literary history of the Durch-speaking areas from the Middle Ages to today), more of the character of a lecture. Blended learning should help here to focus more on the dialogue-based character of a seminar.   
  • Students should be pointed more in the right direction regarding the preparatory reading of literary texts (on the respective era or genre) in order to use the limited time in the face-to-face sessions more effectively.
  • Partially it is desired that the worked-on content is conserved on a long-term basis for the students (as reference works, as a support for term papers, etc.). 



Course

Course titleHistory of literature
Course typeSeminar
Department/InstituteDept. of Philosophy and Humanities, Institute of German and Dutch Languages and Literatures
Degree programDutch Philology (Bachelor)
LecturerJohanna Bundschuh
No. of participantsapprox. 8 - 15
Phaseduring the academic lecture period
Durationone entire semester, ongoing
SWS/CP2 SWS, 5 CP

Tools

Blackboard learning environment:

Concept

Aims of the course


Function and face-to-face as well as e-learning phases

Visualization

Example of a detailed view

Realization

The Blackboard course was set up and pre-structured to a high degree. The following points played an important role:

In the original concept only one test was planned. The deviation from this plan came about due to the fact that sensible questions regarding the content was only possible with relatively many "open" questions (short answers, essays). However, I wanted to ensure that the students received an immediate feedback after they had logged in their answers as I hoped that this would have a motivational effect. Therefore I integrated all of the "closed" questions (question types multiple answers, either/or, unsorted text) into the first test. Only when a good result was achieved there (75% of the answers were correct) was the second part of the test with the open questions activated. The answers given there needed to be corrected by the lecturer and should be evaluated within a time frame of 48 hours.    

Experiences made by the lecturer and evaluation

Basics:

Setting up a well-designed Blackboard course is very time-consuming and can only be recommended if one re-uses this course - then definitely!

Problems and solution strategies that were developed:

Evaluation:

The seminar was evaluated very positively, the question as to the sense of the e-learning elements, however, was on average evaluated a bit more negatively than the other traditional elements of a course such as lectures. Reasons for this were however not really given in the free text fields provided.

In one case feedback was received that the wikis led to a classroom / schooling situation.

The Blackboard were positively assessed with regard to the possibility of checking one's learning and comprehension.

The students felt that they were properly challenged; they found that the time spent on the course though was a bit too much. 

Lecturer impressions:

Point 1 is covered by the SPO and can therefore be ignored. Point 3 is independent of the teaching format in this concrete seminar - the contents can hardly all be pressed into one semester even if there is a stark reduction. The problem only seems solvable if the SPO is changed. Point 2 seems to me to be essential and if this Blackboard scenario is reused then a more independent research and study format needs to be found for the students.

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