Weekly Teaching Tips

If You’re Teaching Online in the Summer, Part III: Rethinking exams, assignments, and other graded work

If the unexpected switch to remote teaching was your first experience moving a course online, you may have discovered that the exams, projects, performances, or other graded assignments that your students normally do in your face-to-face class don’t work as well (or don’t work at all) online. As you’re deciding how to adjust for summer, […]

If You’re Teaching Online in the Summer, Part II: What the heck is a module?

Congratulations on making it through a semester like no other. Thank you for your flexibility, your dedication, and your compassion for your students. We hope finals will be relatively painless for both you and your students, and that the close of this rocky semester is as smooth as it is welcome. Last week, we began […]

Moving from Spring to Summer

As the last week of classes approaches, we would ordinarily suggest wrap-up activities to help consolidate your students’ memories of the most important learning they did in your courses. But in future years, when students look back at this semester, it seems likely that they will remember the disruptions and the emotions most of all. We […]

What about finals?

Since this semester already seems to have lasted several years, it may be difficult to remember what we originally expected our students would learn by the end of the term. Before we were derailed by a pandemic, we had high aspirations for how our courses would help our students to develop intellectually, professionally, and personally. […]

Reverse office hours, reasonable workloads, and remote services

Although we’re physically separated during this global pandemic, we and our students share a common experience: trying to cope with the new reality and somehow get our work done, too. Checking in on how our students are doing helps to re-establish connections that support their learning, and it demonstrates our care for their well-being. David Kirby, poet […]

Options for Remote Teaching

As most of you are aware, all schools in Florida are currently closed, so faculty and students who are parents have lost the structure that supported their academic lives. Teaching and learning with restless children at home will be exceptionally challenging. For many of us, continuing to teach synchronously at a distance may be impossible. […]

How Do We Adapt?

Moving Our Teaching to a New Modality On Wednesday, President Thrasher announced that we will shift from in-person to remote classes for at least the two-week period of March 23rd – April 6th. For those of us with limited or no experience teaching online, this may sound daunting. It’s also likely to be unnerving for […]

Planning For Disruptions

Just In Case: Adjusting Courses and Communicating with Students Living and working in a hurricane-prone state like Florida, we’re no strangers to campus closures. Over the last three years, we‘ve learned the value of developing contingency plans for our courses, just in case. Right now, COVID-19 is all over the news. Governor DeSantis has said […]

Did I Miss Anything Important?

Recovering After Absences You may have noticed sparse attendance in the past couple of weeks. There are plenty of reasons: Students are already feeling overextended, and they often have trouble managing competing priorities. They may stop showing up because they’re stressed. Plus the flu hit hard and early, and other viruses are making the rounds […]

Want Better Student Evaluations?

Getting Feedback in Time to Use It Getting useful feedback on teaching can be difficult. In “Everyone Hates Course Evaluations,” Supiano and Berrett summarize three important objections to the system most universities currently use: Research suggests that student evaluations of teaching are prone to bias, especially against faculty of color; students are unlikely to have the […]