{"id":37666,"date":"2021-03-02t08:00:40","date_gmt":"2021-03-02t13:00:40","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/?p=37666"},"modified":"2021-02-25t17:09:39","modified_gmt":"2021-02-25t22:09:39","slug":"never-going-back-what-online-teaching-in-the-times-of-covid-can-add-to-our-teaching-toolkits-meredyth-wegener","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/2021\/03\/never-going-back-what-online-teaching-in-the-times-of-covid-can-add-to-our-teaching-toolkits-meredyth-wegener\/","title":{"rendered":"never going back: what online teaching in the times of covid can add to our teaching toolkits \u2013 meredyth wegener"},"content":{"rendered":"
by mohammad meerzaei<\/em><\/p>\n <\/a><\/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 the first challenge wegener faced when preparing to teach last fall was one of motivation. \u201cone of the reasons i chose teaching,\u201d said wegener, \u201cis that i really like the fact that you have to show up with a thing at a specific time and place.\u201d the deadlines created by synchronous class sessions keep her on track, but that element is changed in an asynchronous online environment. \u201ci can say \u2018i am going to try and post it at this point,\u2019 but if you don’t get to it, you don’t get to it, and things get shifted down on my to-do list. i felt i was always running behind and i wasn’t able to project the excitement or engagement or inquiry energy that i would like to bring to a classroom.\u201d this made it difficult for wegener to pre-record lectures in a way that can convey to the students the engagement and energy that she usually puts into teaching. however, her videos turned out much more useful than she expected. she realized that recorded videos can serve as a reliable resource for students throughout the semester, because they can refer back to them whenever they needed. this is one element of online teaching that wegener will keep as part of her pedagogy.<\/p>\n the recorded videos had another benefit to teaching online: shifting her lecture material to videos enabled wegener to focus her synchronous time with students on discussions of the social aspects and ramifications of the neurological topics in her course. for example, when discussing autism in one of her courses, she was able to discuss with her students not only the neurological aspects of autism, but also the social implications of whether autism should be considered a disease. \u201ci think for a whole group of students who did not feel represented,\u201d said wegener, \u201cit helped bring up issues through which they could find the missing representation. it also helped all students gain more awareness about certain social situations, for example, students who have experienced doctors not listening to them or dismissing their pain or health issues.\u201d wegener found a similar engagement when discussing data showing how different neurological issues or symptoms are treated by doctors based on the patient\u2019s socioeconomic status or race or gender. \u201cit was really validating for the underrepresented students,\u201d said wegener.<\/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 to make sure that the physical distance of the students did not lead to isolation, wegener added a new grading component to her course. \u201ci added a group grade component,\u201d she said. \u201cstudents were required to fill out group evaluations every two weeks about how their group was going. the evaluation showed whether the students took group activities seriously.\u201d the rubrics that she designed for this component all focused on preparation and collaboration. although it was invented due to the demands of online teaching, wegener found this assessment tool helpful for enhancing the sense of mutual commitment to the class as a learning community. she plans to use this tool when she returns to the classroom, possibly with some adjustments for the different context of in-person group work.<\/p>\n wegener took another, rather unusual approach to building a sense of community with her students. she began to bring her dog, oxford, to campus every friday at a set time for informal outdoor office hours she called \u201coxford hours.\u201d during a time when both she and her students were feeling isolated and disconnected, this pandemic-safe practice helped her students feel more comfortable with her and each other. wegener and oxford plan to continue this new tradition when the pandemic is over.<\/p>\n\u2018oxford hours\u2019: time to re-establish the class as a community:\u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 dr. meredyth wegener, senior lecturer and director of honors in neuroscience<\/h3>\n