Crowdsourcing an academic question
May. 30th, 2020 04:07 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I'm teaching 19th-Century British Poetry and Prose online for the first time in the fall. It's a senior level course, and I'm super excited about it.
I'm wanting to experiment with a couple things, and I would love some input from y'all.
I'm intending to have just five grade categories: midterm, final, essay, discussions, and reading response journal.
Generally when I assign discussions to freshman and sophomores, the grading is very based on the quantifiable (make a certain numbers of posts/replies, posts have to be X number of words in length, posts have to reference the text, etc), and students generally get full credit if they meet those quantifiable metrics. I provide questions for the students to answer on each discussion board. These discussions are also not worth a great percentage of the final grade.
These discussions are generally adequate; sometimes the students get really into it and talk to each other, but mostly they make their one post and their reply, and then they're finished. I would say that most of the students make posts with appropriate (sometimes even really thoughtful) content, but I don't generally get lots of enthusiastic discussion that mimics a classroom discussion.
For this senior level course, I want discussions to be really robust and meaningful, and I'm going to assign them a pretty heft percentage of the final grade accordingly. I just learned that our LMS has video posting built into the discussion boards, so I'm going to allow students to video post if they'd rather do that than text post.
So, what I'm asking (and I'd love to hear from professors and students): What sort of directions do you give students in upper division level or graduate courses on discussions? How many posts and replies do you require, or do you leave that up to the student? Do you provide prompts/questions? What other requirements do you make for the discussion? How do you assess the discussion? What tips do you have for me for making the discussion as robust as possible?
I haven't assigned a reader response journal in a long time (more than a decade) and never in a senior level class. It's going to be worth the least of the grading categories, and I'm intending it to be an informal assignment where they turn in a short document responding to what they've read that week. I'm intending it to be a place where they can hash out their essays for the course; so it would be a place to talk about what they like, what they don't like, connections they notice to other texts/courses/their interests, things that confuse them. I intend to respond to these weekly giving suggestions about turning these ideas into papers.
Any suggestions for the reader response journal assignment in terms of directions or assessment? Is that a terrible idea? Should I just give them weekly quizzes instead? LOL
*chinhands*
I'm wanting to experiment with a couple things, and I would love some input from y'all.
I'm intending to have just five grade categories: midterm, final, essay, discussions, and reading response journal.
Generally when I assign discussions to freshman and sophomores, the grading is very based on the quantifiable (make a certain numbers of posts/replies, posts have to be X number of words in length, posts have to reference the text, etc), and students generally get full credit if they meet those quantifiable metrics. I provide questions for the students to answer on each discussion board. These discussions are also not worth a great percentage of the final grade.
These discussions are generally adequate; sometimes the students get really into it and talk to each other, but mostly they make their one post and their reply, and then they're finished. I would say that most of the students make posts with appropriate (sometimes even really thoughtful) content, but I don't generally get lots of enthusiastic discussion that mimics a classroom discussion.
For this senior level course, I want discussions to be really robust and meaningful, and I'm going to assign them a pretty heft percentage of the final grade accordingly. I just learned that our LMS has video posting built into the discussion boards, so I'm going to allow students to video post if they'd rather do that than text post.
So, what I'm asking (and I'd love to hear from professors and students): What sort of directions do you give students in upper division level or graduate courses on discussions? How many posts and replies do you require, or do you leave that up to the student? Do you provide prompts/questions? What other requirements do you make for the discussion? How do you assess the discussion? What tips do you have for me for making the discussion as robust as possible?
I haven't assigned a reader response journal in a long time (more than a decade) and never in a senior level class. It's going to be worth the least of the grading categories, and I'm intending it to be an informal assignment where they turn in a short document responding to what they've read that week. I'm intending it to be a place where they can hash out their essays for the course; so it would be a place to talk about what they like, what they don't like, connections they notice to other texts/courses/their interests, things that confuse them. I intend to respond to these weekly giving suggestions about turning these ideas into papers.
Any suggestions for the reader response journal assignment in terms of directions or assessment? Is that a terrible idea? Should I just give them weekly quizzes instead? LOL
*chinhands*
no subject
Date: 2020-05-30 08:18 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2020-05-30 09:34 pm (UTC)I'm not into reader response journaling, so I've got no suggestions there.
(no subject)
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Date: 2020-05-31 12:54 am (UTC)I assume this is true for grad students as well as undergrads.
(no subject)
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Date: 2020-05-31 06:33 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2020-06-01 04:03 am (UTC)I'd hate to make or grade video responses, so...you can't skim as easily :)
As for response essays or quizzes, I'd do both! One's for checking reading and can be really simple. In fact, I make mine purposefully simple, but you need to look through the actual reading. In that way, it kind of forces them to read stuff... That works especially well for secondary texts! So unlike the AR tests, which I loathe, you KNOW you're looking for which color the door is in that scene with the neighbor, so you can go back to that scene or pay attention as you read. Not try to recollect it.
I've never used discussion before, but M. had it in his AmLit class last semester, and the system locked it until he'd responded to the prompt (that teacher was really specific and as a result the responses looked an awful lot alike!), and after you'd submitted you could read everyone else's and respond. She didn't require responses, but a friend does (G. took his online only ethics class), and there was a number of responses and a number of responses to responses required. But the overall options were definitely larger, so students weren't required to answer every single one. (and the systems are great to let you drop x lowest number, which means when they don't submit those 0s just get dropped).
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2020-06-01 02:58 pm (UTC)I do have a rubric for discussion posts, and I make it a large part of the grade because it is the only way I have of reinforcing that they're reading, since I don't give tests in a senior seminar, only a final paper (or last spring, they had the choice of a paper or a website).
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