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Best Practices of Online Learning in COVID-19 Year of publication: 2020 Author: Odelia Younge | Kristen Franklin | Dan Foreman | John Seylar | Angela Hardy | Windy Lopez-Aflitto | Missy Bellin | Cricket Fuller | My Nguyen | Vicky Masson | Wrendi McDavid | Jordana McCudden | Karin Bradley | Rachael Wilcox | K. D. Meucci | Jessica Bibbs-Fox | Kristy Carter | Grace Angel | Jiyeon Hong | Sanghyeon Choi | Kwonyoung Lee | Seokhyeon Seo | Seungyeon Kim | Gahyeon Jeon | Yooncheol Shin | Myungwoo Cho | Jiwon Lim | Junyoung Kim Corporate author: Korea Education and Research Information Service (KERIS) | Digital Promise This book introduces teaching strategies that developed as a response to the pandemic and provides some example cases from classes in both U.S. and Korea.  A Qualitative Study on Global Citizenship Education Teaching Experience of Adult Instructors (Asia-pacific Journal of Multimedia Services Convergent with Art, Humanities, and Sociology; Vol. 7, No.5) Year of publication: 2017 Author: Hee Lee | Eunsoo Choi Corporate author: Convergent Research Society Among Humanities, Sociology, Science, and Technology The purpose of the study was to explore how adult instructor understand global citizenship education, how their life changed through global citizenship education teaching experience and what the experience means to the participants. To achieve the research purpose, qualitative content analysis was used. The research participants were 6 adults who are teaching global citizenship education for over 2 years at school, civic group and NGO for international relief. The results of the study are as follows: First, the research participants understood global citizenship education as that forms a wide view to see the world beyond one country and teaches the value of coexistence. They also realized there is a great distance between theory and practice due to limitation of Korean education system. Second, global citizenship education teaching experience became a momentum to develop the ability to choose and act for the life toward a global citizen. Third, the participants transformed their values through .the teaching experience of the global citizenship education. They turned themselves into a teacher who challenges educational obstacles and had an opportunity to form a vision for career and life through global citizenship education teaching experience.  Instructional Design Based on Ecological Multiple Citizenship for Elementary Social Studies Classroom: Focusing on National Citizenship, Global Citizenship and Sustainable Development Education (Social studies education; Vol. 55, No. 1) Year of publication: 2016 Author: Kwangtaek Sim Corporate author: Korean Social Studies Association An instructional model for national citizenship, global citizenship, and sustainable development education was developed. Four lesson plans in the elementary 5thgrade social studies were suggested to show the practice of the instructional model. Three outcomes are reported. First, identity as a citizen of a nation, global citizenship, communications are interrelated. National citizenship and communications in the network society can result in a stronger vision of one’s global citizenship. This is especially the case when the wellbeing and happiness of people in neighboring countries who live across the national boundary are viewed within the domain of community- economy- ecology. Each prepares citizens through knowledge and skills that enable them to empathize, criticize constructively, and live together sustainably. The educational methods recommended to attain global citizenship perspectives are critical thinking, comparative studies, and teaching controversial issues. Those methods tend to result in a commitment to guarantee of non-domination freedom and tolerance of others. Second, discussions regarding sustainable development focused largely on deliberative engagement as a teaching method. Issues discussed were: speculative banking and its regulation; medical treatment and education as value goods; the steps necessary for households and businesses to attain sustainability; and environmental justice and social equity. The educational methods recommended to live together sustainably are planning and practice for grassroots democratic communities’ solidarity by applying back-casting strategy and systematic thinking. Thirdly, social studies classrooms intent on to enhance national citizenship, global citizenship, and sustainable development have a five step task. They, should emphasize comparison and critique→ discussion→ empathy→ planning and lastly the engagement of learners in content critical to ecological multiple citizenship.