Policies and Best Practices for Online Courses

Faculty teaching online asynchronous (OA), online blended (OB), and online synchronous (OS) courses are responsible for meeting all federal and state regulations, University of Connecticut (UConn) policies, and New England Commission of Higher Education (NECHE) standards for online and distance learning. Department heads and program leads must ensure that these requirements are understood and applied when planning and offering online courses.

Compliance, Accreditation, and Quality Standards

Student Authentication

Accessibility

Regular and Substantive Interaction (RSI)

Course Information Transparency

  • Syllabi must include critical information for online learners, including technology, expectations, and policies.
  • Resource: eCampus Syllabus Templates

Quality Standards

  • UConn uses the Quality Matters (QM) rubric as a baseline measure for course design quality. Faculty can create a QM account to access the rubric and related resources. The University Senate Scholastic Standards Subcommittee’s Online Course Standards Subcommittee endorses both the QM Rubric and the Online Learning Consortium (OLC) Scorecard as official guidelines for online course and program quality.
  • Resource: Quality Matters Rubric Online Learning Consortium

Faculty Agreements and Compensation

The following contractual documents define intellectual property rights and compensation terms for online course development and teaching when faculty are paid to develop courses.

Both appear in the UConn-AAUP Collective Bargaining Agreement, July 1, 2021 – June 30, 2025.

Designing and Developing Online Courses

Before submitting an Online Course Support Request, faculty are encouraged to review the ‘Designing and Developing an Online CoursDesigne: Overview,’ which outlines UConn’s eCampus design and development process, available support services, and research-based best practices for online teaching. 

Learn more at: Designing and Developing an Online Course: Overview

Additional Resources