• Academic Integrity,  Assessment and Evaluation,  Remote Teaching

    Academic Integrity and Remote Teaching

    The commitment of the University of Saskatchewan to academic integrity and fair assessment remains in place during this time of remote and online learning. As instructors, here are key points for academic integrity: You should explain your rules again, or any shift in your rules, for assessments.  Clear understanding by students improves students’ academic integrity. You should explain the reason for the rules and how the rules improve learning and/or make the assessment more fair.  Transparency about purpose and decisions improves students’ academic integrity. You should avoid statements focused exclusively on penalties – these are ineffective at deterring dishonesty.   Instead, commit to following up on academic misconduct concerns as…

  • Copyright,  Open,  Remote Teaching

    Online Presentations and Poster Sessions Within Canadian Copyright Guidelines

    We’ve had several instructors approach us about how to move their poster sessions and student presentations to a remote (online) environment. After extensive conversations with the Copyright Coordinator, Undergraduate Research Initiative Coordinator, and our Distance Education Unit, we felt it was a good idea to develop some support resources around this topic. An earlier post addressed choosing appropriate technology, while this one will provide guidance on staying within appropriate copyright parameters. If the work does not contain any copyrighted materials then you have the option of having the students share their posters openly. Give them the option of what license they wish to put on their own work. This could…

  • Remote Teaching

    Panopto or Narrated PowerPoint

    With regards to the use of Panopto for instructional videos, a frequently asked question is, “why one would use Panopto instead of a narrated PowerPoint file or video?” Instructors who are comfortable with using the “Record Slide Show” feature in PowerPoint are encouraged to continue to use it. However, someone who is new to recording slideshows or who is interested in learning a new way of recording instructional videos should consider using Panopto. Reasons to consider Panopto over PowerPoint: One of the benefits of using Panopto is that it creates streaming video files. This means they can easily be viewed on any web-enabled device. In order to view a narrated…

  • Instructional Strategies,  Remote Teaching,  Undergraduate Research

    Virtual Poster Presentations – Recommended Tools

    Note: This list assumes student work is already coming in the likely poster formats (PDF, image as JPG or PNG, PPT, DOC) as opposed to being presented using some unique platform (e.g., Prezi, Sway). Please investigate the help pages linked below first. If you require additional help with one of these tools, email itsupport@usask.ca.   Tool Strengths and Challenges Canvas Discussions ·       Asynchronous (students can access at any time ahead of a given deadline) ·       Students attach their poster to a thread which classmates can view ·       Classmates can add comments / feedback to the thread ·       Simplest tool that enables student interaction! Panopto assignment ·       Asynchronous ·       Students produce…

  • Educational Technology,  Instructional / Course Design,  Instructional Strategies,  Remote Teaching

    It’s Okay to Keep it Simple

    As we all rapidly transition to remote instruction this week due to COVID-19, it is actually better to keep it simple.  When a friend sent me a blog post called Please do a bad job of putting your course online, I was initially offended.  As I read the post, I realized it offered some really good advice.  We aren’t trying to make awesome online courses (that takes too much effort at this stage), and faculty and students are dealing with lots of complications in their lives.  We are trying to protect ourselves and others with social distancing while ensuring students don’t lose the credits they are working for. With that…

  • Assessment and Evaluation,  Instructional / Course Design,  Instructional Strategies

    Featured instructor: Martin Gaal

    Course Innovation Community CIC 2019 Martin Gaal, Lecturer Faculty Member in Political Studies Martin teaches Political Studies 112, Justice and Injustice in Politics and Law to 100 students. He participated in CIC to help address his concerns regarding how to link learning outcomes to active learning strategies that ladder-in formative and summative assessments. Martin has noticed that student support for success is much more difficult with 100+ students than it is when he has smaller classes of 30 students. He continues to look for ways to tighten the course structure with technology and teaching strategies that increase student engagement and maintain a personal connection with students while seeking to maintain…

  • Instructional / Course Design,  Instructional Strategies,  Undergraduate Research

    Featured Instructor : Colleen Bell

    Course Innovation Community CIC 2019 Colleen Bell, Assistant Professor Faculty Member in Political Studies Colleen teaches International Studies 110, Global Studies, to a class of over 80 students. By participating in CIC, Colleen was able to gather new ideas on structuring student debates, improve her use of rubrics, and better able to select and sequence the content necessary to engage students (which sometimes felt like a sacrifice!). She used some of her CIC funding to support grading and coaching and another part to have a team-based competition in class. The competition motivated students to watch and evaluate videos made by their classmates. Colleen’s concerns with large class teaching were that…