Please do a bad job of putting your courses online

Thanks to the many of you who reached out to share that this post helped you through last spring’s sudden transition to emergency remote teaching.

If you are just now coming to this article, note that this was published in March 2020. It’s original audience is for educators, especially college professors, with little or no pedagogical or technological training in online teaching and who, during the early days of the pandemic, were unlikely to be able to get help from overwhelmed course designers or IT departments. As I state clearly at the end, this post is for that moment, when doing what might have felt like a “bad” job (not learning every new piece of technology, not editing your videos to reduce the “umms,” not boning up on 20 years of online pedagogy) allowed us to meet the needs of students best. To learn how to create high-quality online courses even as resources and support continues to be limited in many ways, explore other posts on this blog, including the series Online-by-Design, which offers easy-to-apply suggestions for building online courses informed by compassion for students, respect for content, and sound digital pedagogy.

Rebecca

I’m absolutely serious.

For my colleagues who are now being instructed to put some or all of the remainder of their semester online, now is a time to do a poor job of it. You are NOT building an online class. You are NOT teaching students who can be expected to be ready to learn online. And, most importantly, your class is NOT the highest priority of their OR your life right now. Release yourself from high expectations right now, because that’s the best way to help your students learn.

If you are getting sucked into the pedagogy of online learning or just now discovering that there are some pretty awesome tools out there to support students online, stop. Stop now. Ask yourself: Do I really care about this? (Probably not, or else you would have explored it earlier.) Or am I trying to prove that I’m a team player? (You are, and don’t let your university exploit that.) Or I am trying to soothe myself in the face of a pandemic by doing something that makes life feel normal? (If you are, stop and instead put your energy to better use, like by protesting in favor of eviction freezes or packing up sacks of groceries for kids who won’t get meals because public schools are closing.)

Remember the following as you move online:

  1. Your students know less about technology than you think. Many of them know less than you. Yes, even if they are digital natives and younger than you.
  2. They will be accessing the internet on their phones. They have limited data. They need to reserve it for things more important than online lectures.
  3. Students who did not sign up for an online course have no obligation to have a computer, high speed wifi, a printer/scanner, or a camera. Do not even survey them to ask if they have it. Even if they do, they are not required to tell you this. And if they do now, that doesn’t mean that they will when something breaks and they can’t afford to fix it because they just lost their job at the ski resort or off-campus bookstore.
  4. Students will be sharing their technology with other household members. They may have LESS time to do their schoolwork, not more.
  5. Many will be working MORE, not fewer, hours. Nurses, prison guards, firefighters, and police officers have to go to work no matter what. As healthcare demand increases but healthcare workers get sick, there will be more and  more stress on those who remain.
  6. Some of your students will get sick. Others will be caring for people who are ill.
  7. Many will be parenting.
  8. Social isolation contributes to mental health problems.
  9. Social isolation contributes to domestic violence.
  10. Students will be losing their jobs, especially those in tourism and hospitality.

All of these factors mean that your students are facing more important battles today than your class–if they are even able to access it.

creative E-learning Concept Book and Laptop 3d render

Photo by NosUA from Getty Images.

As you put your class online:

1. Put your energy into the classes that are required for your major or minor or that are required by other majors or minors. Electives and GE classes are an important part of a good education, but we have already decided that what students learn in any one of those courses is not vital. (The exceptions to this are GE courses that are required for a major.) For some of us, this is every class we teach, but for others, we have the ability to choose to focus our attention.

2. Do not require synchronous work. Students should not need to show up at a specific time for anything. REFUSE to do any synchronous work.

3. Do not record lectures unless you need to. (This is fundamentally different from designing an online course, where recorded information is, I think, really important.) They will be a low priority for students, and they take up a lot of resources on your end and on theirs. You have already built a rapport with them, and they don’t need to hear your voice to remember that.

4. Do record lectures if you need to. When information cannot be learned otherwise, include a lecture. Your university already has some kind of tech to record lectures. DO NOT simply record in PowerPoint as the audio quality is low. While many people recommend lectures of only 5 minutes, I find that my students really do listen to longer lectures. Still, remember that your students will be frequently interrupted in their listening, so a good rule is 1 concept per lecture. So, rather than a lecture on ALL of, say, gender inequality in your Intro to Soc course, deliver 5 minutes on pay inequity (or 15 minutes or 20 minutes, if that’s what you need) and then a separate lecture on #MeToo and yet another on domestic violence. Closed caption them using the video recording software your university provides. Note that YouTube also generates closed captions [edited to add: they are not ADA compliant, though]. If you don’t have to include images, skip the video recording and do a podcast instead.

5. Don’t fuss too much about the videos. You don’t need to edit out the “umms” or the postal carrier ringing the doorbell. Editing is a waste of your time right now.

6. Make all work due on the same day and time for the rest of the semester. I recommend Sunday night at 11:59 pm. Students who are now stay-at-home parents will need help from others to get everything done, and that help is more likely to arrive on a weekend. While, in general, I dislike 11:59 due dates because work done that late is typically of lower quality, some people will need to work after the kids go to bed, so setting the deadline at 9 or 10 pm just doesn’t give them enough time.

7. If you use a textbook, your publisher probably has tests that you can download directly into your learning management system (LMS). Now is the time to use them. Despite publishers’ best efforts, these tests quickly float around online, so take a few minutes to add some anti-cheating protections. First, organize questions into test banks and have them fed to students at random. For example, if you want to ask two questions about pay inequity, select 5 of them from the test bank, and have your LMS feed two of them to students at random. This makes it MUCH harder for students to work together, because they will never get the same exact test as a peer. Second, change the wording on the questions so they can’t easily paste them into Google. In example questions, changing the name of the person in the example is one fast way to make the questions harder to locate online.

8. Allow every exam or quiz to be taken at least twice, and tell students that this means that if there is a tech problem on the first attempt, the second attempt is their chance to correct it. This will save you from the work of resetting tests or quizzes when the internet fails or some other tech problem happens. And since it can be very hard to discern when such failures are really failures or students trying to win a second attempt at a quiz or test, you avoid having to deal with cheaters.

9. Do NOT require students to use online proctoring or force them to have themselves recorded during exams or quizzes. This is a fundamental violation of their privacy, and they did NOT sign up for that when they enrolled in your course. Plus, they are in the privacy of their homes, sometimes with children who will interrupt them. It may be impossible for them to take a test without interruption. Circumvent the need for proctoring by making every exam open-notes, open-book, and open-internet. The best way to avoid them taking tests together or sharing answers is to use a large test bank.

10. You have already had some kind of in-class work, I’m guessing, so you do not need to further authenticate their identities on exams. If you are suspicious that a student is cheating–for example, someone was previously performing very poorly on in-class assessments and is now scoring very well, which might make you think that they’ve hired someone else to take the class for them–address that situation individually.

11. Remind them of due dates. It might feel like handholding, but be honest: Don’t you appreciate the text reminder from your dentist that you have an appointment tomorrow? Your LMS has an announcement system that allows you to write an announcement now and post it later. As you put your materials online, write an announcement reminding them of the due date to be released 24 hours before it is due. The morning of, send a note to everyone who has not yet turned it in. (In Canvas and Blackboard, you do this by going into your gradebook and right clicking on the header of the assignment. You’ll see an option to email all students who have not yet completed the work. It takes less than 1 minute if you are already logged in.)

12. Alert them to any material that is not appropriate for children to watch, including minute markers for scenes of violence or nudity. Again, you need to assume that they are doing their work with children in the background.

13. Make everything self-grading if you can (yes, multiple choice and T/F on quizzes and tests) or low-stakes (completed/not completed).

14. Don’t do too much. Right now, your students don’t need it. They need time to do the other things they need to do.

15. Listen for them asking for help. They may be anxious. They may be tired. Many students are returning to their parents’ home where they may not be welcome. Others will be at home with partners who are violent. School has been a safe place for them, and now it’s not available to them. Your class may matter to them a lot when they are able to focus on it, but it may not matter much now, in contrast to all the other things they have to deal with. Don’t let that hurt your feelings, and don’t hold it against them in future semesters or when they come back to ask for a letter of recommendation.

****

This advice is very different from that which I would share if you were designing an online course. I hope it’s helpful, and for those of you moving your courses online, I hope it helps you understand the labor that is required in building an online course a bit better.

Like what you read? Support it.

500 thoughts on “Please do a bad job of putting your courses online

Add yours

  1. Sound Advice! A very telling overview of what we should consider for ourselves and our students as we temporarily move our classes online.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. If you have seen and learned from this piece, I’m proud to point out that among her many fine qualities, the author holds a PhD in American Studies from Kansas.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Foundational to my development as a teacher as well as a scholar!

      If you learned how to be a compassionate teacher from someone else, today would be a great day to tell them!

      Like

  3. would love to hear how much you would apply some of this to online learning that is being forced to happen now in elementary, middle and high schools. if at all.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. This is so tricky because standards are different in K-12–and they also vary from state to state. Some schools also have a 1:1 program for students to use laptops (which does not solve the internet issue).

      My best advice would be to make everything online also available to students on paper, but as some schools are already closed, even figuring out which students need that would be difficult. Maybe have a P/F assignment due right now, and then teachers could call the students who don’t do it and ask if they have access to the internet. But also know that even if they due, all deadlines have to be flexible. Even if a kiddo has a computer, someone else could be using it. And home life is not conducive to getting good work done right now. Give all students the option of a grade or a P/F, so those who find that they flourish in this setting can improve their GPAs but those who struggle aren’t punished.

      What do my K-12 friends say?

      Like

  4. Good info, thanks. I’m going through this right now as an Instructor at a local college. The College President just says, “put your class online, by Monday”. Like it’s as simple as flipping a switch. As you accurately stated, it’s not that simple.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Sincerely thank you, I have shared this with my department as we are attempting to teach courses online that are extremely hands-on!

    Like

  6. Sorry if any this has been mentioned before — I can’t get older comments to load. I already teach online, so just a couple of comments :

    This is the time to think about flipping the class — students do the reading, then come to class to discuss it, not listen to the teacher repeat it. Ask yourself what the concepts are that you want them to learn, and make those the discussion forum questions. Ask them to post “the most important sentence” and why.

    Interact with the class in those discussion forums — correct, clarify, support, provide examples. My students mention this every semester in my course evaluations.

    I’d take advantage of the class meeting time in some way; not anything required, but supplementary. Students already have it blocked out, and while everything has been upended, they have the habit of being in class at that time every week. For instance, hold virtual office hours or Q&A sessions. You can hold them other times, too, of course.

    Our LMS already reminds students of assignments and exams. If yours does, make sure it’s set to do so. Usually involves just ticking a box. I give students a one-week grace period on all work. Saves a lot of hassles.

    Make your news/announcements forum “forced subscription.” Send a weekly summary of the previous week and a brief introduction to the coming week.

    Your LMS may allow for the formation of groups, which would allow for small-group work/discussions.

    I would point out that “no synchronous work” applies to exams, as well. They need to be open all week. They can be timed, so that students have a fixed amount of time to complete it once opened, but I wouldn’t even recommend that — because kids and door and phone, etc.

    I make all work due Monday at 6:00 a.m. rather than Sunday at midnight. I’m not going to start grading until Monday morning (so you could make it 8:00 a.m.) and those late night/early morning hours are sometimes the only ones that students with kids have.

    Personally, I’d have titled this “Do a “good enough” job of putting your course online.”

    Like

  7. I think the author’s point is (under this particular set of COVID circumstances) that we cannot expect either students or faculty to full-on achieve (or even aspire to) perfection. Designing an on-line course can and should take careful deliberation. RIGHT NOW none few us are there. We all need to cut ourselves some slack–students as well.

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Thank you so much for this advice. I sent a summary email to my classes assuring them of many of these points (because you have reassured me): learning will continue but will be realistic to our changed circumstances, accessible, and even compassionate. Almost immediately the first response from a student came in: “Thank you for the update. In my other classes, none of my professors seem aware of these issues. Thank you for putting us first.” That’s good enough for me.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. What a gift to give your students—the reassurance that we understand their needs! Thank you for offering it to them and for sharing this encouraging story!

      Like

  9. ejonconrad

    You said You have a lot of really good points here, but your title is awful. I don’t intentionally do a bad job of anything.

    Really? You took that blog post title literally? Really? It’s meant to be clickbait, to get people’s attention! It worked, it got may attention! Stop being a serious pansy

    You said this is 2020. If a college student doesn’t have a computer, they should get a computer. .

    Yes, this is 2020! In 2020, poverty still exists! In 2020, there are still people who come from low-income families who are in college now who don’t have access to the money to pay for the latest computers

    You also said . You can get a perfectly decent laptop for less than the price of some textbooks, and certainly a tiny fraction of tuition, even at a community college.

    You sound like Mitt Romney when he said all the young people need to do to start a business is just ask their parents for money. As Julian Castro sarcastically responded in the 2012 Democrat convention “why didn’t I think of that?”
    It’s that kind of attitude that caused Romney to lose that year’s election!

    And one more thing, if you’re going to make “hey look at me everyone, I’m being politically incorrect” posts like yours, use your name instead of hiding behind fake names!

    Like

  10. Appreciate your sentiments. My sister and I have been communicating about how to transition our courses to online. I quickly came to the conclusion to “just do good enough.” I’m sure we will all come to different conclusions about what that means, but trying to meet students where they are at this point in time is probably a solid place to start.

    Liked by 1 person

  11. I’m a student who doesn’t have a computer. When the last one died I couldn’t afford a new one so I got a cheap tablet and I use the computer lab at school. Or I did. Now I’m borrowing a computer and all I can do is use Word. No cameras, no printer. So I appreciate your thoughts on the matter, it has been hard and it’s been made harder by the scramble to take care of the elderly people I work for who can’t get out and brave the hoarders themselves. Fortunately my professors are keeping things simple.

    Like

    1. Thank you for sharing your story, Tai. I know that hearing this directly from a student matters to faculty who are reading.

      Thank you for caring for others in need now. I’m glad that your profs understand that the duties we have to others matter and are making it possible for you to learn in the situation you are in.

      Like

  12. Thank you for sharing.
    I appreciate the insight about the difficult environment that students might be experiencing at home, their priorities in this unusual moment, the hint at not wasting too much energy in preparing online stuff, and the suggestion to say NO when our boss asks us to do extra work.
    But… random test banks and rewording of texts/questions so that student cannot google, isn’t this a waste of time?
    I will do all I can to share my knowledge with students, and presume that they want to learn not to cheat me.
    And oh, quizzes! NO, NEVER! Sorry, don’t take it personally. Here in Europe quizzes with three or four answers to choose from are not welcome. We want our students to be able to give a coherent answer in their own words.

    Like

  13. I did not read all 214 comments, so I may be repeating an earlier one, but I want to express my appreciation for your reminding faculty that there are more important things than student grades and faculty completing their syllabi without missing anything. Somehow it is easy to remember this when comforting a student who has lost a parent or other family member or who has been battling a serious illness, Maybe that is because we are dealing with students one-on-one then and it is easier to make accommodation. In the madness of the Coronavirus and schools moving classes on-line, some basic human needs seem to have been overlooked: kindness, understanding, health (mental and physical), family time, and financial survival. I might, however, suggest that the title could be “No One Expects Perfection in Your Recently Transitioned Online Courses.” Your title is catchy, but none of us like to think we are deliberately do a bad job of teaching.

    Like

  14. You have a lot of really good points here, but your title is awful. I don’t intentionally do a bad job of anything. I didn’t when I made pizzas in college, and I don’t as a university professor. My colleagues and I are scrambling right now to put everything online, and doing our best to give the students as much of their money’s worth as we can – understanding they’re still being cheated a bit because of this. The best we can do is to keep their loss to a minimum.

    We ask them to be understanding during the transition, and so far they have been. I wonder how they would react if I said “Thanks for paying my salary, but I’m trying to do a really bad job of this.”.

    Last year we lost a couple weeks because of smoke from the California fires. We tinkered with doing things online, but we knew it was only temporary. In contrast, this likely isn’t just a hiccup. We’re told to prepare for weeks, perhaps months, before we can hold live classes again, so yes, we are – suddenly and reluctantly – teaching “online courses” now. Most of us have no experience with this, but speaking for myself and my colleagues, we take this to mean that we need to get our act together quickly, rather than that we can be excused for doing a half assed job. You seem to conflate working hard to solve the problem with “throwing lots of technology at it”. In all cases, we’re trying to find the lowest tech solution that will work best for the students, regardless of whether it means more work for us.

    As to some of your specific points, this is 2020. If a college student doesn’t have a computer, they should get a computer. If they’re not comfortable with technology, they should get comfortable with technology. Presumably they’re going to college to get a better job, and I literally can’t think of any decent jobs where those things won’t be required – certainly not jobs that require college degrees. You can get a perfectly decent laptop for less than the price of some textbooks, and certainly a tiny fraction of tuition, even at a community college. If that’s still a problem, all universities have programs to get underprivileged students computers. If this serves as a wake up call in that department, then it’s probably done some good.

    As for priorities, I guess teaching isn’t my highest priority. My highest priority is keeping myself and my family healthy, not that literally requires my NOT doing things I would have had to do otherwise, so I have more – not less – time to devote to teaching.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I don’t think every college student should have a laptop. Using campus computer labs is a smart way for a student to save money. And since a syllabus for a F2F class that started weeks ago likely didn’t require a laptop, it’s unfair to try to require one now. More importantly, whatever we wish for our students, “let them eat laptops” isn’t going to get them the equipment they need.

      It’s reasonable that students know or learn how to use the tech a traditional class uses when they enroll in a traditional class. My point is that now is not the time to ask them to learn a bunch of new tech that we ourselves haven’t even mastered. That isn’t serving them well—it’s setting them up for failure. Should they be able to use a word processing program? Sure. But beware trying to introduce a half semester’s worth of new tech. Let them focus their learning on the content, not on wrestling with unfamiliar products.

      Liked by 1 person

  15. This is sound advice. I have been using an LMS (Blackboard and Carmen) since 2006; I completed my MLIS through an online program and I am currently the discovery librarian at a university library. This means I am the reference librarian with an emphasis on guiding students in using online resources. People may think that because young adults grew up with surrounded by technology that they are experts on anything internet. They are not.

    Our library website is quite simple, but even after library instruction, many students cannot tell the difference between the catalog search and website search (which is used to search what is on the website, not a catalog or database. We removed this feature). They can’t figure how to open a database, or know that they need to write down the call number (or what one looks like) to find a book in our collection. And when they don’t know how to use something they do not always tell you; one student came to me five weeks after their class had started to report that they could not find where their homework was posted. It was in a clearly labeled folder they had never bothered to open. Thankfully most students do know how to, at the very least, turn in written home on BB.

    We also have professors who do not have any interest in online instruction, and they are absolutely not prepared to move online in a weeks time. We are fairly rural and our internet has been pretty miserable recently. All classes will be held asynchronously to prevent a system crash. This will be good, as it will reduce stress for both professors and students. Anyone who has live streamed a meeting knows how difficult it can be, and it takes a lot of prep and experience to deliver a good presentation (in any format!).

    Powerpoints, PDFs, notes, and audio recordings are just fine! Don’t expect profs and students who have never used an online forum to be able hold a meaningful discussion in just a week or two of moving online. It can take the whole semester to get good conversation. And Blackboard’s forum functionality…is not great. The most important thing professor can do is make themselves available to answer questions. They should be checking their email and if they can’t be at school they may need to give out a cell number. Not ideal, but communication is important.

    Really, I feel like a lot of people who don’t see the value of this post probably are not having to deal with this specific issue…

    Like

  16. @ Dan Edens two thumbs down I will be implementing much of these suggestions in my classes in the coming weeks. I think the author makes some great points.

    Liked by 1 person

  17. thank you rebecca!! It is so important to hear and consider this. Those of us who study technology know better than anyone that “just because you CAN use technology, doesn’t mean it is the best thing to do.”

    Liked by 1 person

  18. Stop convincing people that “I’m not good with computers lol” is okay to say.
    It’s not hard.
    Boomers going to boom

    Like

    1. Try again. I’m not a Boomer or a Luddite.

      I just recognize that today’s not the day to ask students who didnt sign up for an online course, possibly because they don’t have the WiFi, laptop, or webcam required, to learn to use new and often technologies.

      Not a really radical argument.

      Like

  19. Thank you so much for this. I am trying to share it far and wide.

    My wife and are facing this work right now for two very different classes, hers a medicine and literature course (she is not a “tech” person, so I’ll be sharing in this effort) mine an epublishing internship.

    Your recommendations here speak to so many of the concerns I have as a technologist/editor/teacher who has worked in an English department for thirty years.

    (Despite using a variety of tools from the very early Daedalus to contemporary tools in teaching, I’ve never developed, nor wanted to develop, an online course, and I understand that what that takes to do it well is beyond the reach of most of us to get hold of, especially mid-semester and in the middle of crisis.)

    I hope faculty (and administrators) slow down and take your words to heart.\

    Like

  20. Yes. I teach computers and in my district, MANY of them would not have access if we closed. THAT would disadvantage them. And an emergency situation is not a time to work out a plan. Now, we will know that we should already have one in place. Is my school going to work out the access to Zoom or Panopto or Hangouts? And the coordination of synchronous. Yes. If a plan was made ahead of time and practiced. We didn’t know we would ever need this.

    Like

  21. Rebecca,
    While you have clearly struck a chord with readers, you make numerous claims about students, but present scant if any data to support your claims.
    Claim 1- Students will be doing this work on their phone.
    Evidence- None provided.
    Fact Checking- According to the ECAR Study of Undergraduate Students and Information Technology, 2017, 95 percent of undergraduate students own a laptop or a smartphone and 30 percent own a laptop, a smartphone, and a tablet.
    With synchronous Zoom meetings, you can call in to the meeting, like making a phone call.
    Claim- Students cannot learn online or have tried and failed.
    Evidence- None provided.
    Every classroom and student make-up is different, but my classes which are core courses are for typically first or second year students who have not tried and failed to learn online.
    Rebecca, where is the data to support this argument? This is a huge claim!
    If you submitted this as an argumentative essay in my comp class, I would note the total lack of evidence. Plenty of pathos, not much else.
    As for misreading you, I am not the one who choose a click bait title as you did.
    Well that’s it. I am back to prepping my existing online classes and doing my best to transfer my bricks and mortar classes online for my students who do have the technology as evidenced by the trial run we did in classes last week.

    Like

  22. Thanks for this, Rebecca Barrett-Fox. A rich, thoughtful perspective in a time when when we most need it, ..when it may be hard to come by. Our students, ourselves well served.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to Nic Shump Cancel reply

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑