Skip to main content

The calm before the storm

Classes start next week. I opened up my Blackboard courses on Tuesday (i.e., made them accessible to students), which means some of the students in my Econ for Teachers course are likely to show up here (welcome!) since there's a link on the Blackboard site. Everything is pretty much done (well, except for all the stuff that's not) and at this point, I'm just hoping I haven't overlooked anything major. I'm trying so many new things and in the weeks ahead, I'm sure I'll have lots to think about as I evaluate the good, the bad and the ugly.

One of the new things is the letter I sent to my Principles students. I may have some issues with Blackboard as a 'learning' management system but I have to say, the ability to send email to 500 students, before classes even start, is pretty useful. My objective with the email was to get a jump on some of the more frequently-asked questions I get about buying course materials, and to make sure that students really understand how open I am to having them contact me, since I know that with a class this large (and at a big state University like mine in general), some students will think that they shouldn't "bother" me. I also wanted to plant the seed in their minds that even though it's huge, this class is not going to be just another sit-back-and-passively-listen kind of experience. Of course, that also stresses me out, since the more I set up that expectation, the more important it obviously becomes for me to make sure that the class really is interactive.

So my struggle now is simply with my own expectations for myself. I know that nothing will be 'perfect', especially this first time around, and I keep trying to remind myself that teaching is an iterative process; whatever I don't like this semester, I can fix the next time around. In fact, one of my former students has already pointed out, in the comments to my previous post, my letter needs fixing because it may have been confusing to many students (yeah, that comment didn't stress me out at all...). It's just hard to squelch that part of me that really wants it to be right THIS time.

Comments

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm sure it'll go fine! Students usually appreciate professor efforts to make things more involved tech-wise. :)

    Until then, enjoy the calm while you can and Labor Day weekend, too, Jennifer!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I appreciated your letter to the large course and did not find it confusing or weird. Seemed to demonstrate genuine concern for your students and set a good tone for learning. Best wishes for a great semester!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thank you so much for the encouragement!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Comments that contribute to the discussion are always welcome! Please note that spammy comments whose only purpose seems to be to direct traffic to a commercial site will be deleted.

Popular posts from this blog

THE podcast on Implicit Bias

I keep telling myself I need to get back to blogging but, well, it's been a long pandemic... But I guess this is as good an excuse as any to post something: I am Bonni Stachowiak's guest on the latest episode of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast, talking about implicit bias and how it can impact our teaching.  Doing the interview with Bonni (which was actually recorded a couple months ago) was a lot of fun. Listening to it now, I also realize how far I have come from the instructor I was when I started this blog over a decade ago. I've been away from the blog so long that I should probably spell this out: my current title is Associate Vice President for Faculty and Staff Diversity and I have responsibility for all professional learning and development related to diversity, equity and inclusion, as well as inclusive faculty and staff recruitment, and unit-level diversity planning. But I often say that in a lot of ways, I have no business being in this position - I've ne...

When is an exam "too hard"?

By now, you may have heard about the biology professor at Louisiana State (Baton Rouge) who was removed from teaching an intro course where "more than 90 percent of the students... were failing or had dropped the class." The majority of the comments on the Inside Higher Ed story about it are supportive of the professor, particularly given that it seems like the administration did not even talk to her about the situation before acting. I tend to fall in the "there's got to be more to the story so I'll reserve judgment" camp but the story definitely struck a nerve with me, partly because I recently spent 30 minutes "debating" with a student about whether the last midterm was "too hard" and the whole conversation was super-frustrating. To give some background: I give three midterms and a cumulative final, plus have clicker points and Aplia assignments that make up about 20% of the final grade. I do not curve individual exams but will cu...

This is about getting through, not re-inventing your course

As someone who has worked hard to build a lot of interactivity into my courses, I have never been interested in teaching fully online courses, in part because I have felt that the level of engaged interaction could never match that of a face-to-face class (not that there aren't some exceptional online courses out there; I just have a strong preference for the in-person connection). But the current situation is not really about building online courses that are 'just as good' as our face-to-face courses; it is about getting through this particular moment without compromising our students' learning too much. So if you are used to a lot of interaction in your F2F class, here are some options for adapting that interaction for a virtual environment: [NOTE: SDSU is a Zoom/mostly Blackboard campus so that's how I've written this but I am pretty sure that other systems have similar functionality] If you use clickers in class to break up what is otherwise mostly lect...