My small private college has been on a hyper-accelerated schedule to convert our entire current course schedule to a 6 week online course which will theoretically allow all our students to finish their Spring 2020 coursework.
Since I’m in the middle of all this myself, I thought I’d share a few things I admire from colleagues near and far and invite others to share their stories, ideas, thoughts, frustrations, small victories, humorous moments.
First, an “adjusted syllabus” from a UNC-Chapel Hill instructor that someone sent to my wife today:
Adjusted Syllabus
Spring 2020
Name Redacted
UNC - Chapel Hill
Principles
- Nobody signed up for this.
- Not for the sickness, not for the social distancing, not for the sudden end of our collective lives together on campus
- Not for an online class, not for teaching remotely, not for learning from home, not for mastering new technologies, not for varied access to learning materials
2. The humane option is the best option.
- We are going to prioritize supporting each other as humans
- We are going to prioritize simple solutions that make sense for the most
- We are going to prioritize sharing resources and communicating clearly
3. We cannot just do the same thing online.
- Some assignments are no longer possible
- Some expectations are no longer reasonable
- Some objectives are no longer valuable
4. We will foster intellectual nourishment, social connection, and personal accommodation.
- Accessible asynchronous content for diverse access, time zones, and contexts
- Optional synchronous discussion to learn together and combat isolation
5. We will remain flexible and adjust to the situation.
- Nobody knows where this is going and what we’ll need to adapt
- Everybody needs support and understanding in this unprecedented moment
Next a “welcome back to the online part of the semester” by my own colleague, a Digital Media Design professor named Roy Manfredi:
I will add more to this story as I have time. Please add your best stuff to the thread and, given time and opportunity, I will pull some into the same text.