Editing Online Communities and Crowds (Winter 2022)/Undergraduate sections

From CommunityData
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 8: Line 8:
# Cooperative learning amongst students
# Cooperative learning amongst students


Section will generally (but not always) follow the following structure:
With the exception of week 1 (where we'll spend a lot of time reviewing class logistics and expectations), section will generally follow the following structure:


* ~35 min Structured discussion of the readings that week
* ~35 min Structured discussion of the readings that week
Line 26: Line 26:
Additional points of consideration I'm specifying here for section:
Additional points of consideration I'm specifying here for section:


* Generally, you should be communicating about undergraduate section attendance with me.
* You should be communicating about undergraduate section attendance with me rather than Prof. Shaw.
* Each student has a one free "pass" day where you can miss, no questions asked. Just tell me that you need to take your "pass" day.
* Each student has a one free "pass" day where you can miss, no questions asked. Just tell me that you need to take your "pass" day.
* In general, missing a section or two is no big deal, so long as you let me know; beyond that, we should probably figure out how we can make sure this course is working for you.
* In general, missing a section or two is no big deal, so long as you let me know; beyond that, we should probably figure out how we can make sure this course is working for you.
Line 35: Line 35:
Because the smaller group interactions happen primarily in discussion sections, much of your participation grade (but not all) will be based on discussion section participation. Please note [https://wiki.communitydata.science/User:Aaronshaw/Assessment#Participation Prof. Shaw's guidelines for assessing participation], which I will be following. Some specific things for section that all students are expected to do that will factor into participation:
Because the smaller group interactions happen primarily in discussion sections, much of your participation grade (but not all) will be based on discussion section participation. Please note [https://wiki.communitydata.science/User:Aaronshaw/Assessment#Participation Prof. Shaw's guidelines for assessing participation], which I will be following. Some specific things for section that all students are expected to do that will factor into participation:


* Each week, ~2-4 students will be doing note-taking of the reading discussions during the section (sign-ups in week 1) on a shared Etherpad. At the end of section, you will copy and paste the notes into a Word Doc and submit it on the section page on Canvas. This means that students should sign up for two different weeks to take notes.
* Each week, ~2 students will be doing note-taking of the reading discussions during the section (sign-ups in week 1).
* ~2-4 students will be annotating the readings (~300 word summary per reading) on provided Google Doc and (uploaded as PDF on section Canvas by 11PM CT on the Thursday before section). This means that students should sign up for two different weeks to annotate.
* Each week, ~2 students will be annotating the readings and uploading those notes by 11PM CT on the Thursday before the section (sign-ups in week 1).
* Students must attend office hours with me to discuss CA2 (we will do sign-ups as we approach CA2).
* Students must attend office hours with me to discuss CA2 (we will do sign-ups as we approach CA2).
These are graded as complete/incomplete. You may coordinate with your fellow week note-takers/annotators; I encourage making this a team effort and meeting as a group. However, keep in mind that both etherpads and Google Docs show me who contributed how much, so please do hold yourselves individually accountable.


Beyond that, participation is understandably a kind of unclear thing for many students. Like Prof. Shaw, I do not assess participation in terms of how much you speak in class but rather in terms of how much you contribute to the course (please read [https://wiki.communitydata.science/User:Aaronshaw/Assessment#Participation Prof. Shaw's guidelines for assessing participation] to understand what I mean by this). Here are examples of some concrete things you might do other than speaking that I consider participation:
Beyond that, participation is understandably a kind of unclear thing for many students. Like Prof. Shaw, I do not assess participation in terms of how much you speak in class but rather in terms of how much you contribute to the course (please read [https://wiki.communitydata.science/User:Aaronshaw/Assessment#Participation Prof. Shaw's guidelines for assessing participation] to understand what I mean by this). Here are examples of some concrete things you might do other than speaking that I consider participation:
Line 56: Line 54:
If you're in the 1PM section, you can sign up on [https://wiki.communitydata.science/Online_Communities_and_Crowds_(Winter_2022)/Undergraduate_sections/1PM 1PM Section Page]
If you're in the 1PM section, you can sign up on [https://wiki.communitydata.science/Online_Communities_and_Crowds_(Winter_2022)/Undergraduate_sections/1PM 1PM Section Page]


=== Collaborative Note-taking ===
=== Note-taking rules ===
Notes will generally be taken on a shared etherpad. Etherpad is a lightweight collaborative text editing tool that Prof. Shaw and I use a lot.
 
We take very seriously making the classroom a respectful and safe place to have engaging discussions. When you are taking notes, please respect the privacy of others' experiences and follow the golden rule of <b>what's shared here, stays here</b>: if someone shares a personal experience, you should note the lesson of that experience but any details about that experience stay in the classroom. Furthermore, the notes shouldn't specify who said what. The idea of the notes is to capture the flow of the main points of discussion as a summary of what was discussed and said.
We take very seriously making the classroom a respectful and safe place to have engaging discussions. When you are taking notes, please respect the privacy of others' experiences and follow the golden rule of <b>what's shared here, stays here</b>: if someone shares a personal experience, you should note the lesson of that experience but any details about that experience stay in the classroom. Furthermore, the notes shouldn't specify who said what. The idea of the notes is to capture the flow of the main points of discussion as a summary of what was discussed and said.


Please note that all contributions to CommunityData are considered to be released under the Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported (see CommunityData:Copyrights for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

To protect the wiki against automated edit spam, we kindly ask you to solve the following CAPTCHA:

Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)