I’m working on something kinda crazy right now that sorta fits with this theme. Background: This semester I’ve got an online math 113 course and a hybrid math 113 course that I’m teaching as one big course (40+ students) and allowing the students in either course to decide on any given week if they want to come in during our class meeting time (this traditionally is the hybrid meeting time) or not. So online students can come in if they want help and hybrid students don’t have to come if they don’t need the help or if life has happened that week. This is my attempt of meeting the students where they are and giving them the support they need to be successful. Class time won’t be traditional and will focus on the needs of the students who came to class that week. So this could include mini lecture, board work, working through a data set, breaking off into groups with similar questions so students can help each other, me bouncing around from group to group or person to person seeing what they need help with.
The change in the assignments for this new type of course is because I realized I needed to go through and simplify things for their sake and mine! My first step was taking out my beautiful tabbed pages - I love them, but I don’t think they are working as well for the students. Too much “stuff” and not enough focus.
The next step and the one I’m working on/struggling with is trying to figure out what the students “really” need to know and how I can achieve that they best way possible without having too many assignments. Right now I have quizzes, discussions, homework, projects, and feedback exchanges. Yes, a little of all of these types of assignments every week! It’s a lot to grade and I often wonder if all of it is really necessary. So back to the basics I go... or at least I’m trying...
I love the projects - this where students really have to understand and “get” the material in order to analyze the data and write up their results. There are 4 of them, they are all application based, have multiple parts that get turned in along the way, and we are always working on one of them during any point in the semester. In general I get good feedback from students that they like the projects.
I also really like most of my weekly discussions and feel strongly that they contribute to the big picture learning of the class, conceptual understanding, and help keep students engaged with each other and me (because yes, I participate in my discussions!). I normally get good feedback from students on these as well.
I’ve just started adding “homework” to the course over the last few semesters. These are worksheets in as untimed Canvas quiz. I addded them because it seemed like students needed the extra experience with Minitab (Statistical software we use) and working through a data set. It also seems to help them do better with the projects and students have indicated that the homework has helped them understand what they are doing.
Feedback exchanges are something new I’m formally adding this semester. I’ve been informally doing it to increase engagement and I’ve seen some wonderful results and gotten great feedback from the students. I could write a lot about it, but the gist of it is that for this semester I’m going to have a weekly survey where I ask students for feedback on the class materials, class assignments, and then for the student to reflect on how they are doing in the course and where are they having problems and where do they think they could improve. I’m going to review this feedback and the students work/grades and then respond with my own feedback on what I’m seeing and my recommendations for what the student could be doing to get more from the course. I’ll also take into account the feedback on the course materials and assignments and use this as a way to improve the course, if not for this semester then for the next. I’m also going to have students respond to my feedback with some type of acknowledgement so I know they at least saw my feedback. And if a real conversation comes out of this, then bonus!
Quizzes... quizzes were originally put in place because they cover the main “big” concepts of the course, and we - me and the other person who teaches Math 113 ( @James ) - felt it was important that students were assessed on these concepts that we cover, but might not get assessed directly in a project or discussion. If I remember correctly the quizzes were also added because overall course grades had gotten disproportionately higher without the feeling that students understood the material as well. This was after the course went from a traditional exam based course to a more project based course. Right now quizzes are untimed, open for 1-2 weeks before the due date, and students are normally given 5 attempts on each quiz with the average used at their score for the quiz. So not traditional quizzes and more like homework. Yet, students tend to not like them and in some cases I wonder if some of the quizzes are focusing on things that don’t really matter as much anymore - ex: hand calculations.
My plan is to review all of my assignments and try to tighten things up and see where I can cut, and I’ll be honest, quizzes were the first place I was going to look. Yes, they are the easiest for me because they all autograde, but are they helping students as much as they could? Or, is it just another thing they have to do and they aren’t really focusing on it anyway? Decisions, decisions, decisions...
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