by mohammad meerzaei<\/em><\/p>\n
<\/a>dr. meredyth wegener has travelled an exciting path with online teaching in the time of covid. the initial challenge of teaching online has led wegener to new prospects for making her courses diverse, inviting, and collaborative learning communities. now she looks forward to implementing these new approaches in her in-person classes. <\/em><\/p>\n
not being physically present in the classroom can certainly affect students\u2019 learning. but the increased time that students have for working on the course material individually led wegener to rethink her assessment. the first assessment activity was inspired by an article on \u201cunderstanding checkpoints\u201d<\/a> by jennifer schaefer in the journal of undergraduate neuroscience education<\/em>. \u201cyou give students a set of figures from a research paper,\u201d shared wegener, \u201cand you ask them a series of questions about it. then you provide them with the research paper and they have to grade themselves on their responses to the questions [using the full article]. i think this practice worked really well for the students because it met a lot of the core goals of the class, such as being able to interpret data figures and read and interpret primary research literature. it was more explicitly in concert with my goals of metacognition for the students and allowed me to really push them past simply checking the validity of their responses. the point of the assignment is to see where they could have done better, reflecting on their strengths and weaknesses.\u201d<\/p>\n
.<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"