This is a compilation of updates sent out to School Instructional Continuity Coordinators in CoS.
Administration of synchronous exams
Please read the Provost's "Proactive and Necessary Outreach to Students" message (below).
We have reached the end of the second week of all courses being delivered in a distance format, and I have heard from many of you that, while disruptive and imperfect, courses and assignments are well underway. Let me first thank you for your continued diligence and focus as I know family, health, and safety issues continue to be top of mind for all of us, and that includes our students.
Despite the general success of the distance learning delivery, we are learning, from direct communication and data analysis, that students and families are under enormous stress and that some students are struggling. Not unexpectedly, many of our students are finding themselves in less-than-ideal situations to study. Some have to deal with crowded environments, family obligations, sick relatives, and increasing financial burdens. I know we all can relate. It’s critical that each of us recognize the extraordinary and trying times, and respond with empathy, kindness, and flexibility.
We cannot operate the educational enterprise under the same rules and even expectations of the normal school year. Please do everything needed to support the academic and overall well-being of the students in your courses. Beyond the feedback measures and course surveys I hope you have already implemented, I encourage you to pay close attention to students who might not be engaging in class discussions, chats, or assignments. Look for signs of distress. Identify these students and proactively reach out to them. As we continue toward the end of this modified semester, please remember the following:
- Communicate, be available, and be flexible. Your students want to hear from you more often, but they also want to be heard, so stay committed to open, two-way communication. Remind students of academic support and campus support services that are available, but, most importantly, please extend the flexibility necessary to help any and all of your students successfully complete their coursework.
- Allow for circumstances while preserving course integrity. Ongoing adjustments may be necessary. Visit the Assignments and Exams suggestion link for considering other forms of assessment, such as papers or projects. Access the Academics and Instruction FAQs for more details on accommodating students with disabilities, final exam rules, and further clarification on allowable changes to the grading criteria.
- Don’t demand perfection. Just like you, our students may have extenuating circumstances that are hampering their progress. Listen to student concerns, be responsive, and offer as much accommodation as you can, including use of tools like Kaltura Personal Capture to record your sessions.
- Adjust grading expectations appropriately and submit grades on time. Use your best and fairest judgment when determining grades for assignments, exams, and quizzes, as well as final overall course grades. Students should be graded on their performance relative to the current circumstances. Also, please allow students every opportunity to complete their course rather than giving an Incomplete.
Regards,
Rafael L. Bras, Provost
Thursday, March 26, 2020 11:48 AM
- Existing tools and technologies, e.g. Canvas, Kaltura, and BlueJeans conferencing, are the backbone for academic continuity. Instructors should test their remote education delivery capabilities this week by connecting with students.
- No instruction will take place the week of March 23. Assessments and homework deadlines previously scheduled for the week of March 23 should be postponed until March 30 or later.
- A shift to distance learning, and loss of a week of instruction, will require changes to some courses. To the extent possible, minimize changes to the syllabi, but do make reasonable adjustments. Instructors should communicate any changes in the syllabus to their students as soon as possible (by Monday, March 30). An online conversation with students (see #1 above) would be a good forum for this communication; follow up with an email to students.
- Instructors may choose to survey their students about access to technology (webcam, camera phone, scanner, printer, microphone), access to a robust network connection, and their time zone. Individual responses to this survey should not be shared with other students. Data from this survey will allow instructors to determine what accommodations might be necessary for the entire class or for individual students. [Thanks to the School of Mathematics for this suggestion]
- By the end of the week, School Instructional Continuity Coordinators should have heard from every instructor that they have tested their remote education delivery capabilities, modified their syllabus, and are prepared to teach next week. Please report progress on this to me by Friday.
- Some schools are using technology packages that are associated with the textbook for the course. These might provide a good option for setting exams.
- Exams can be administered in Canvas (with options to randomize questions and to change variables). However, the format of the questions is rather limited, e.g., multiple choice, numerical, short answer (e.g., one word or simple phrase).
- A somewhat low-tech and low-overhead method of administering a traditional exam would be to: (1) create an assignment in Canvas, and (2) make the exam available to students at the beginning of the exam period (e.g., as a PDF file posted to Canvas, or sent by email via Canvas). Since students are not required to have printers or scanners, have the students: (3) compose their answers on a plain piece of paper, (4) take a photo of their answers on a cell phone, and (5) upload the image(s) to the assignment to Canvas. (6) Instructors can grade the papers within Canvas. Step-by-step instructions will be provided soon.
- Faculty training on remote delivery, discussion of pedagogy, and testing remote instruction technologies
- Communication with students this week
- Testing technology with students next week
- "Going Live" Monday, March 30.
1. CoS has added additional one-hour online training sessions to allow instructors to set up their streaming lecture schedule. Sessions are based on a beginner's guide to using Canvas and BlueJeans for Remote Instruction.
Thu Mar 19 11:30 AM -12:30 PM
Fri Mar 20 9:00-10:00 AM
Mon Mar 23 2:00-3:30 PM
Tue Mar 24 12:00-1:00 PM
Wed Mar 25 11:00 AM-12:00 PM
Thu Mar 26 11:30 AM -12:30 PM
Fri Mar 27 9:00-10:00 AM
These sessions are available online at: https://bluejeans.com/4048941309 (click on this link a few minutes before the scheduled time)
2. The institute has provided the additional guidance
- Academic Guidance for Faculty for Continuing the Semester. This is a new Institute resource that gives guidance on academic matters such as syllabi changes, grades, and typical student regulations.
- Institutional Instructional Continuity Plan. This site contains information for continuing instruction remotely, including both technical and pedagogical information. Some specific helpful sites linked from this page include Academic Continuity Resources for a guide to instructional technology and pedagogy resources for teaching remotely. Other specific resources linked through this site include Faculty Guidance for Teaching Remotely; Training Sessions and recordings on technology and pedagogy for teaching remotely (including office hours for people to ask for help); Keep Teaching: Support from CTL; and the University System of Georgia Site giving resources for teaching online.
These guidelines are consistent with the following College of Sciences expectations/guidelines that are a part of every CoS school’s instructional continuity plan.
- Remote instruction must use Georgia Tech provided tools and platforms such as Canvas and the tools within Canvas, including BlueJeans. Using these technologies reduces risks by protecting student data, insuring ADA compliance, and addressing fair-use issues.
- Remote instruction must include faculty-student and TA-student interactions during the regularly scheduled class meeting times (e.g., the scheduled times for lecture and studios).
- It is a best practice to record synchronous remote sessions that are held at regularly scheduled class meeting times and to post these so that students can view these at other times.
- Instructors may choose to augment their synchronous instruction with asynchronous delivery of content (e.g., by posting materials to Canvas for use by students outside of class time).
- Instructors should be available to students online during their regular office hours.
- Computational laboratories may need to be modified, depending on the access that students have to software.
- Other laboratory sections should be modified to provide students with alternative assignments.
- Instructors may change the syllabus in mid-semester according to guidelines provided by the Institute. See Mar 17 updates (below):
- Any changes to the syllabus should be communicated to students by March 30.
- Minimize changes in the way that parts of the course are weighted in determining the course grade.
- Journal of Visualized Experiments: https://www.jove.com
- From the Chronicle of Higher Education: How to Quickly (and Safely) Move a Lab Course Online
- If we initiate remote instruction on March 30, we will have lost one week of instruction.
- Currently, the dates and regulations related to finals (incl. last days of instruction, reading days) remain unchanged. We should plan on adhering to existing policies unless we are notified of changes.
- Any changes to the syllabus should be communicated to students by March 30. Instructors might consider telling students now that changes will be made to accommodate the loss of one week of classes, and confirm the changes by March 30. Please consider avoiding due dates in the first few days (or first week) of instruction.
- To the extent possible, instructors should minimize changes in the way that parts of the course are weighted in determining the course grade. For example, if test 1 was originally worth 20%, it might be unsettling to students if it becomes worth 40%. Put another way, if, for example, 45% of the grade was still to be determined when instruction was suspended, it should still be that way when instruction is resumed.
- It is permissible to change the types of assignments that will be given over the remainder of the semester. These changes should be communicated by March 30. Some ideas regarding how exams might be administered will be forthcoming.
- Some students still need to make up assignments that they missed prior to the suspension of instruction. They should not be asked to make up this work until instruction is resumed. However, this should be communicated to them soon so that they can prepare to complete the assignment once instruction resumes.
- Some courses had assignments scheduled for the week of March 23-27 (now suspended). How the schedule will be modified to accommodate for this should be communicated to students as soon as possible, even if other changes to the syllabus will not been finalized until the March 30 deadline for doing so.
- Right now, guidance is that if you can work remotely you should do so. Please plan on resuming your teaching from an off-campus location if at all possible. I recommend that instructors do not plan on using on-campus facilities for remote instruction
- While laboratory instruction cannot continue, instructors should incorporate relevant activities for the remainder of the course (e.g., interpretation of data, modeling, writing, etc).
- This week, instructors should determine how they will interact with their students using Georgia Tech provided tools and platforms. Faculty should not seek to use other, non-licensed/non-approved tools. Use of GT-supported tools such as Canvas, and the tools within Canvas (including BlueJeans), protects student information, facilitates ADA compliance, and promotes adherence to fair use rules. This week, consider setting up communications with a colleague to test your connectivity.
- Next week, plan on communicating with your entire class to test everyone's connectivity. Instructors should communicate to students now that they will test online connectivity together during one of the class' regularly scheduled meeting times toward the end of next week (March 23-27). Instructors should invite students to an online meeting (e.g., a BlueJeans session) to make sure that the technology works. No new material should be covered during this session, but it is reasonable to use this session as an office hour to discuss how the class will resume, how the syllabus will be modified, and to set students' minds at ease about how we will
- Practice now so that there are no nasty surprises on March 30!
Monday, March 16, 2020 10:15 PM
Urgent update - Instruction in remote instruction:
- CoS training for instructors on the use of BlueJeans in Canvas to stream their desktop and to use their smart phone as a document camera: Tuesday and Wednesday (9:00-10:30 and 2:00-3:30, both days) ONLINE only - go to https://bluejeans.com/4048941309 a few minutes before a session is scheduled to begin.
- Some schools have organized their own working groups to engage all faculty on the use of these and others tools.
- The institute also offers other training sessions in a variety of tools for remote instruction.
See: https://cos.gatech.edu/continuity
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