How to Manage POGIL Online
A variety of circumstances could require you to take your class online with minimal notice. This page is still evolving, but is intended to be a resource for you during that time.
With the devastation of the COVID pandemic came new innovation from our practitioners as we moved virtual for workshops and events. Staying connected through the pandemic was only achieved with great community support and participation. Now that we are back with in-person offerings, we are thrilled to have face-to-face interactions once again. Browe below for a list of resources we found useful for teaching through COVID.
"How to Take POGIL Online During the COVID-19 Crisis" (with Karl Bailey, Michael Garoutte, Lydia Kitts, Charity Lovitt, and Kristin Plessel)
Link to Google Doc with some questions that arose during this webinar
"Best Practices in Asynchronous Learning" (with Karl Bailey)
Links to Documents used during the webinar are here
"Using PhET Simulations for Remote Learning and Labs"
Some information from this webinar
Recap of the Q&A during the webinar.
Visit the PhET website
"POGIL Online in High School and Middle School Environments" (with Stephanie O'Brien, Susan Richardson, Laura Trout, and Marty Perry)
Recap of the Q&A during the webinar.
List of resources mentioned during the webinar.
POGIL Best Practices in an Asycnhronous Environment (with Claire Major and Kevin Forgard)
Challenges to the Mental Health of High School & College Students: What Can We Do? (with Dr. Stuart Slavin)
Trauma-Informed Teaching for Restorative Justice (with Mays Imad, Pima Community College)
When you realize you have to move your class online quickly, consider the following right away:
STEP 1: Review your syllabus for points that should change: What will have to change in your syllabus (policies, due dates, assignments, etc.)? Since students will also be thrown off by the changes, they will appreciate details whenever you can provide them.
Consider realistic goals for continuing instruction: What do you think you can realistically accomplish during this time period? Do you think you can maintain your original syllabus and schedule? Do you hope students will keep up with the reading with some additional assignments to add structure and accountability? How do you want to keep them engaged with the rigor of the course content? As much as possible, allow students to complete work asynchronously. At times such as this, less is more.
Identify your new expectations for students: You will have to reconsider some of your expectations for students, including participation, communication, and deadlines. As you think through those changes, keep in mind the impact this situation may have on students' ability to meet those expectations, including illness, lacking power or internet connections, or needing to care for family members. Be ready to handle requests for extensions or accommodations equitably. Give explicit instruction. Be deliberate and clear. Specify the length of time you expect each assignment to take and specific task requirements.
Look at the learning objectives for the course. When triaging, it is important to do what you need to do and focus on those objectives to keep value for the student.
Review your course schedule to determine priorities: Identify your priorities during the disruption—providing lectures, structuring new opportunities for discussion or group work, collecting assignments, etc. What activities are better rescheduled, and what can or must be done online? Give yourself a little flexibility in that schedule, just in case the situation takes longer to resolve than you think.
Be understanding and empathetic. Encourage students to balance online work with offline time with family and those in need.
Be present! Communicate consistently. You must be a present and active voice in your class whether synchronously or asynchronously. Let your students know when you will be online and available for consultation. Respond to their posts as soon as you are able. This will encourage communication and involvement in your class.
Seek out student feedback. Ask them what is working and what isn’t and make changes as needed. This isn’t about you or your ability to teach but rather their ability to process information in the midst of a crisis.
As much as possible be creative and thoughtful in your lessons. Consider alternative forms for assignments that build self-care into classwork. Could students draw a picture explaining a concept and share it with the class? Could they journal and reflect? Could you send them outside and have them identify parts of the natural world that correlate with your lesson goals? If all they do is sit and read and write responses they will quickly lose interest in the class.
Curate multimedia materials and use digital tools to boost creativity and interactivity during lessons.
Ask questions and share concerns. We are better together than we are alone. Together we can make this a successful semester for our students!
STEP 2: Pick tools and approaches familiar to you and your students: Try to rely on tools and workflows that are familiar to you and your students, and roll out new tools only when absolutely necessary. A closure may be taxing to everyone's mental and emotional energy; introducing a lot of new tools and approaches may leave even less energy and attention for learning.
STEP 3: Communicate with your students right away: Even if you don't have a plan in place yet, communicate with your students as soon as possible, informing them that changes are coming and what your expectations are for checking email or the platform you use for grading (Canvas, Blackboard, etc.), so you can get them more details soon. Create a detailed communication plan. Once you have more details about changes in the class, communicate them to students, along with more information about how they can contact you (email, online office hours, etc.). A useful communication plan also lets students know how soon they can expect a reply. They will have many questions.
How to Be a Better Online Teacher (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
OLC Continuity Planning and Emergency Preparedness (Online Learning Consortium)
Going Online in a Hurry: What to Do and Where to Start ( March 9, 2020 - The Chronicle of Higher Education)
So You Want to Temporarily Teach Online (March 11, 2020 - Inside Higher Ed)
POGIL Activities in an Asynchronous Learning Environment (ChemEdx.org blog) - by Stephanie O'Brien
What to Do When It's 3 PM and You are Still in Your Pajamas (Chronicle of Higher Education)
Why Zoom is Exhausting (Inside Higher Ed)
Tweets about Homeschooling (Huff Post)
Has Reading Become More Difficult? (Chronicle of Higher Education)
Are you Less Productive? (Inside Higher Ed)
Working or Learning From Home During COVID-19? Make Sure to Avoid Blue Light Before Bed (Slumber Yard)
Post-Pandemic Mental Health: Data and Resources (RegisteredNursing.org)
Our friends at PEER Physics have compiled a list of Remote Collaborative Learning Tools at this link
Synchronous Options - (live online meeting space, can share screen, chat, etc)
Zoom Meetings (The POGIL Project uses Zoom for all of its eLearning and webinar series). Bonus... you can select your background as you teach.
**Keep in mind, live online meetings are only as good as the internet speed allows. On campus internet speeds are excellent but off campus, home, etc might be different. Do a speed test of your internet to gauge if a live synchronous meeting will work. The more people on your network, especially at home, the slower it will be.
Facebook Groups
There are a variety of Facebook groups that have been established to deal with the issue of online learning. Here are links to some of them:
Teaching and Taking Care (a high-vibe and supportive group of teachers committed to cultivating our Mental Health, Wellness, and Community!)
Please send any others that you may be aware of to marcy.dubroff@pogil.org and she will post them on this page.
Other Links
POGIL's publishing partner Flinn Scientific has launced a website with an extensive amount of resources specifically developed to help teachers, students and parents continue their science education journey – even if that learning is taking place outside the classroom or laboratory environment.
Education Companies Offering Free Subscriptions due to School Closings: http://www.amazingeducationalresources.com/
Screen-cast-omatic simple, free screen recording software https://screencast-o-matic.com/
Online Resources for Science Laboratories (POD) Remote Teaching
Two-way communication for updates, instruction, and more Remind.com
Platform to create, share, play learning games, administer quizzes Kahoot.com
Using videos to improve communication Loom.com
Great website for aggregating research from the community Zooniverse.org
At-Home Learning and Other Resources for Students, Families and Educators from the Emerson Collective
QUBESHub QUBES has created a a site to pool resources together to help educators during this time of need. Visit the Teaching Quantitative Biology Online group to find resources to help you during this tough transition.
Let Yourself off the Hook (Advice for teachers and parents during COVID-19)
Sanford Harmony Webinar - Mindfulness for Teachers
Sources:
FRANKLIN & MARSHALL COLLEGE. "Keep Teaching." https://sites.google.com/fandm.edu/instructionaltechnology/keep-teaching
Network, POD. “Home.” POD Network: Professional and Organizational Development Network in Higher Education, 2020, podnetwork.org/.
UNIVERSITY, INDIANA. “Keep Teaching During Prolonged Campus or Building Closures.” Keep Teaching During Prolonged Campus or Building Closures, 2020, keepteaching.iu.edu/.