Common pitfalls of discussion board responses
Some courses will ask you to post in an online discussion board, and discussion boards are the primary way many web-based courses facilitate class discussions. The idea is to give an insightful, in-depth response to the prompt (something you would raise your hand and say in a face-to-face classroom). Use this resource as a guide to making effective, thorough discussion board responses that add to the conversation.
Common Pitfalls
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Underdeveloped responses
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Statements like “I agree with the author” or “The author makes a good point” are easy, but they don’t demonstrate understanding of the material or add anything to the conversation
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Why do you agree? What specifically is the point the author is making?
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Language that is too informal
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Discussion boards are often less formal than an essay or paper, but it is important to remember they are happening in an academic environment
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Different instructors will have different expectations so make sure to read prompts and syllabi carefully
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Repeating other students
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This is a discussion, so you are expected to add something
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If everyone else is saying, “Dr. Smith is suggesting that service learning should be a mandatory component of all college courses,” find a new perspective: “It’s true Dr. Smith focuses making service learning a standard part of college curriculum, but I feel we should also consider how requiring service learning may not always be helpful to community organizations.”
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Ineffective peer responses
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Instructors will sometimes require you to respond to other students as part of the assignment; even when it’s not required, actively participating in the discussion will help expand your understanding of the concepts
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“Great point!” and “I agree” don’t add anything to the conversation. Just like your main post, your response to your peers should expand on their ideas or challenge them (respectfully)
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Things to ask yourself
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Are you answering all parts of the discussion prompt?
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Read the prompt carefully. Is it asking one question or multiple?
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If you can, look at the prompt before you read the assigned materials. This will help keep the prompt in mind while you are reading.
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Are you offering a comprehensive response to the discussion prompt?
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Did you answer all elements of the prompt or just part of it?
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Is there a connection to other readings and assignments?
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Use specific examples from the reading to support your ideas
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Is your response simply answering the response or are you making connections between the prompt and the course learning objectives?
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Checking the boxes might get you a passing grade on this one assignment, but thinking about how it connects to the larger course learning objectives will help you better understand those concepts
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Keep the course learning objectives in mind for all assignments
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Are you saying something new or just repeating other students?
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If you can, look at what other students have already said and add something new. You wouldn’t raise your hand in a face-to-face class and repeat something someone else just said.
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Write something that furthers the conversation
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Contributors: Tony DeFilippo & Derrian Goebel