Tag Archives: Corona

Life Update + Updates about this blog

Hello, hello! Long time no see. When I started this blog in March 2020, I intended it to chronicle my experience of moving my Calculus 2 class online in light of Covid-19. Having said that, I did have plans for what this blog would become after my class ended: I wanted to continue writing about techniques that have helped me improve my teaching, as well as pedagogical tools that I have considered implementing but haven’t yet (and why). 

Once Spring 2020 actually ended, though, I hit a metaphorical wall: the structure that having a class to teach was giving me suddenly disappeared, and I had a hard time reinventing my schedule from scratch. So I took an unintentional 5-week hiatus from this blog and spent some time (finalizing grades and) tending to other aspects of my personal and professional life. I spent more time doing research and writing, learned to cook more delicious food, started learning how to draw and illustrate on my iPad (using Procreate).

I recreated a Brooklyn Nine-Nine poster using Procreate.

I also started coding a board game in Python, which is a side-project I’ve wanted to work on since freshman year of college and have just not gotten around to it. (If any of this interests you, tell me in the comments: I’d love to chat more about my quarantine hobbies!)

Alongside these personal projects, I got nominated for and accepted a fellowship that will allow me to work closely with math faculty specifically on ways to engage students in an online platform. As part of this fellowship, I participated in a 3-week training that was meant to “help faculty reconceptualize their course materials in order to deliver it an online course or be prepared to move flexibly between different modalities of delivery.”  

The cohort of trainees in this 3-week program included faculty and graduate students from all departments of Emory. The graduate students were mostly those who were nominated by their respective departments for this fellowship. In contrast, the faculty included everyone teaching in the Summer semester at Emory. This allowed me to have conversations with people in all sorts of subjects about effective teaching.

Starting next week, I will help facilitate a similar training, specifically aimed at the math faculty who are signed up to teach in the Fall. I’m excited to get to talk to people who have taught math for years and years, about the challenges and opportunities of teaching an intentional, engaging, and rigorous online course.

What this means for this blog for the next few weeks, is that instead of posting about things I’ve done and whether they helped, I might post about challenges I foresee in remote learning and possibly ideas about how to overcome them. Since I’ve never taught a real online class before, most of these blog-posts might feel unresolved and might end with more questions than answers. I hope that writing these questions down will help me clarify ideas in my head and help me gather ideas from the internet hive-mind.

So I hope you will engage, and if you have ideas and solutions, you will share. One of my favorite mentors recently told me that she believes teaching should be a community exercise, and that she wants to foster an environment (within our department) where anyone can go up to anyone else and ask “Hey, I’m teaching XYZ and I’ve run into this problem. How did you handle it when you taught something similar?” I hope that I can practice the same in this little corner of the academic internet.

See you guys next week, with the first installment in this series, a blogpost about synchronous vs. asynchronous delivery.

Mini-tip Monday: Canvas Pages

I have decided to post a “mini-tip,” a bite-sized piece of information or suggestion that has helped me streamline or improve my teaching, on Mondays. For the next several weeks, these will specifically be about moving to remote learning amid the Covid19 crisis. The hope is that I can keep this going once things are back to normal.

Today’s mini-tip is about Canvas Pages. I have been using Zoom to deliver my lectures synchronously, and Canvas to communicate with my students otherwise. All homework, lecture notes, lecture videos, etc. are posted on Canvas. One consequence of moving online is that there is a whole flurry of information that needs to be communicated to students related to every class period, e.g., class recording, notes, any related hw due that day, summary exercises*, etc.

Even though I’m hosting synchronous classes, I am trying to post extra resources for students who cannot make it to synchronous lectures for various reasons (e.g., students who are in vastly different time-zones) and thus can’t take advantage of the option to interrupt me and ask questions in class.

All this being said, this means that I needed a way to provide them with all of this information in one, easily accessible, user-friendly place. Enter Canvas Pages!

I’ve set up a “Module” in Canvas called “Online Classes,” which contains a Canvas “Page” for each class session that I’ve taught. Here’s a visual of how that looks. The title for each Page is just the date of the lecture.

 

The green tick marks in front of the Pages indicate that these Pages are published.

Once you click on each Page, I have the following template set up. I fill in the relevant information after each class session.

In this class session, we will be talking about Section [section number]: [section title] from the textbook.

Topics and Learning Objectives:

[List of topics and Objectives]

Before you come to class:

[Readings they should do before class and/or problems they should work on before coming to class.]

Links to:

– Class Notes, Class Recording, Summary Exercise, any other resources.

Not every class session needs all of this information, but it is helpful to me to have a template, so I don’t miss anything. Here’s an example from last Monday.

I hope this is helpful for other people who are transitioning their classes to an online remote-learning format. Please let me know if you have any questions about my set up and/or any ideas to make it better!

 

Stay safe and sane!

*I will do a separate mini-tip Monday on Summary Exercises if you're curious.

Teaching in the time of Corona

I’ve been wanting to start a blog about my experience teaching undergrads for a while now, but haven’t taken the plunge for various reasons. Now that the Covid19 pandemic is forcing us all to teach online, I thought it might be worthwhile to share how I’m dealing with everything that comes with that. The hope is that this might become a medium to share and receive ideas, or if nothing else, a sense of solidarity.

I’m writing this first post one day before my first online class. I’ll be using Zoom on my laptop for sharing video, and I will be sharing my iPad screen where I’ll be writing down notes for the students to read. I will post an update with how it goes tomorrow!

For now, here’s my list of everything I plan on having on my desk and apps I will be using on my devices while teaching, in no particular order.

  • My laptop, with Zoom Web Conferencing installed.
  • My iPad Air, with Notability for taking notes, and Desmos for quickly referencing graphs that I can’t draw by hand.
  • Apple Pencil.
  • My trusty bluetooth earphones with mic.
  • A cup of chai (black tea, brewed in hot water and steeped in warm milk)
  • Facial tissues.
  • A glass of water.
  • My handwritten notes: One page with just the outline of the lecture, divided into 5-10 minute chunks, one notebook with detailed notes, solved examples, etc.
  • The textbook, just in case.

(Am I going overboard with this? I don’t know, but I’m of the view that being over-prepared is better than being under-prepared.)

Wish me luck!