Teaching during a pandemic: Using high‐impact writing assignments to balance rigor, engagement, flexibility, and workload

The COVID‐19 pandemic has created new challenges for instructors who seek high‐impact educational practices that can be facilitated online without creating excessive burdens with technology, grading, or enforcement of honor codes. These practices must also account for the possibility that some stude...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology and evolution 2020-11, Vol.10 (22), p.12573-12580
Hauptverfasser: Reynolds, Julie A., Cai, Victor, Choi, Julia, Faller, Sarah, Hu, Meghan, Kozhumam, Arthi, Schwartzman, Jonathan, Vohra, Ananya
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container_issue 22
container_start_page 12573
container_title Ecology and evolution
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creator Reynolds, Julie A.
Cai, Victor
Choi, Julia
Faller, Sarah
Hu, Meghan
Kozhumam, Arthi
Schwartzman, Jonathan
Vohra, Ananya
description The COVID‐19 pandemic has created new challenges for instructors who seek high‐impact educational practices that can be facilitated online without creating excessive burdens with technology, grading, or enforcement of honor codes. These practices must also account for the possibility that some students may need to join courses asynchronously and have limited or unreliable connectivity. Of the American Association of Colleges and University's list of 11 high‐impact educational practices, writing‐intensive courses may be the easiest for science faculty to adopt during these difficult times. Not only can writing assignments promote conceptual learning, they can also deepen student engagement with the subject matter and with each other. Furthermore, writing assignments can be incredibly flexible in terms of how they are implemented online and can be designed to reduce the possibility of cheating and plagiarism. To accelerate the adoption of writing pedagogies, we summarize evidence‐based characteristics of effective writing assignments and offer a sample writing assignment from an introductory ecology course. We then suggest five strategies to help instructors manage their workload. Although the details of the sample assignment may be particular to our course, this framework is general enough to be adapted to most science courses, including those taught in‐person, those taught online, and those that must be able to switch quickly between the two. Writing‐intensive courses may be one of the easiest high‐impact educational practices for science faculty to adopt as they adjust to teaching during the pandemic. Writing assignments promote lasting conceptual learning, deepen student engagement, offer flexible implementation, and can be designed to reduce the possibility of cheating and plagiarism. To accelerate the adoption of writing pedagogies, we summarize characteristics of effective writing assignments, offer a sample writing assignment from an introductory ecology course, and suggest strategies to help instructors manage their workload.
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subjects Academic Practice in Ecology and Evolution
Audiences
Climate change
Cognition & reasoning
Colleges & universities
Core curriculum
coronavirus
COVID-19
Critical thinking
Disease
Ecology
Education
Eli review
Feedback
Knowledge
Learning
Pandemics
peer review
Science
science education
STEM
Students
Study abroad
Teachers
Teaching
Workload
Workloads
Writing
writing pedagogy
writing‐to‐learn
title Teaching during a pandemic: Using high‐impact writing assignments to balance rigor, engagement, flexibility, and workload
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