Professors learn to adapt and innovate with online classes – Harvard Gazette

Because this is a Gen Ed course, it combines studio work with conversations and lectures about painting as a language that engages with the world, said Saunders. One of the [original] assignments was that we would go paint all together in Mount Auburn Cemetery, but now I am asking students to start scouting out where they are, thinking about this dislocation in place, finding themselves suddenly in a different situation, and creating a work about the psychological space of that new location.

In the course An Integrated Introduction to the Life Sciences: Genetics, Genomics, and Evolution, which is required for life sciences concentrators, Hopi Hoekstra and her colleagues revised in-person lab components and recorded some elements of discussion and lecture for wider availability to students scattered across the globe.

We are trying to keep the flow of the course very similar to how it was before spring break, said Hoekstra, Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology in the Departments of Organismic & Evolutionary Biology and Molecular & Cellular Biology, curator of mammals at the Museum of Comparative Zoology, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. We still have pre-lab quizzes and post-lab assignments. Its a balance between trying to keep everything similar to the rhythm that the students have gotten used to, while making these tweaks to try to keep that rhythm as engaging and interesting as possible.

But how exactly can this done if students dont have access to labs? One assignment called for students to collect biological sample from their environments, extract the DNA, and analyze the resulting data. Instead, Hoekstra and her team collected samples from items including a cellphone, a boot sole, and a dogs toy, and recorded a teaching fellow modeling the DNA extraction process. The team sent the samples to an external lab for sequencing and sent the resulting data to students for analysis. They were then assigned to match each samples DNA profile to one in a database.

Online teaching is very different from face-to-face teaching, and what I love about it is that you can layer in archival and visual materials in a way that is engaging and vibrant.

Elisa New

With remote lab work, even though [students] miss the part of doing the field biology, they still get to do part of the scientific process, which is very fun, because the answer is unknown and theyll get to discover that themselves, said Hoekstra. Were trying to make sure that they get the foundational information that they need [for future courses]. It is also a pretty exciting time to be thinking about genetics and evolution in the middle of a viral outbreak, because what theyre learning is being talked about in the news all the time and theyre learning how it works.

For some, the online classroom was a more familiar environment. Elisa New, Powell M. Cabot Professor of American Literature, used spring break to retool the syllabus for her course Migrations: Fictions of America to include more of the resources she had developed over the past seven years as creator of the digital platform and TV series Poetry in America and as an instructor at Harvard Extension School and HarvardX.

In my experience of teaching online, I have discovered that making asynchronous learning the foundation of a course, and layering in synchronous learning that is, everybody together on a Zoom session is a much more reliable way to make sure the whole class participates, said New, who will be combining live conversations with videos, recorded lecture content, and Canvas prompts for class discussion. New also incorporated episodes from Poetry in America into weekly course content on topics including Civil War poetry and Midwestern modernism as seen in Willa Cathers novel My ntonia, and other cultural products.

Online teaching is very different from face-to-face teaching, and what I love about it is that you can layer in archival and visual materials in a way that is engaging and vibrant, she said, noting that even if other faculty dont have established online teaching resources to use in their courses, flexibility in content and schedule can be useful in successfully adapting courses to a digital environment.

Professor of the Practice of Molecular and Cellular Biology Robert Lue echoed this sentiment. Lue, who is also faculty director of the Harvard Ed Portal, UNESCO chair on life sciences and social innovation, Richard L. Menschel Faculty Director of the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning, and faculty director and principal investigator of LabXchange, combines live and recorded class meetings for his course Cell Biology in the World. He estimated that, so far, the Bok Center has reached more than 350 faculty members through online seminars and individual consultations to prepare for online teaching.

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Professors learn to adapt and innovate with online classes - Harvard Gazette

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