Yes. If you have a live synchronous lecture with students asking questions then the live stream and the recording must be private to the class. For example, you can put them on Canvas or Panopto's site to restrict access to your class. You should also tell students the class is being recorded, and tell them the recordings are to be used for the class only.
Important: please add the following notice to your recordings to make sure students do not post it elsewhere: "Recordings of course sessions are provided solely for educational use by students enrolled in the course and may not be distributed to any other person or posted on the internet without the express written permission of the course instructor"
What do I do with my recorded lectures?
“Uploading to the cloud” is an option when you start recording in Zoom. You will then have access to them on your zoom account through CMU (cmu.zoom.us). You can then either download them or get a link to them. You can put them on Canvas, or put a link to them on your course web page (note privacy issue above). You can also record to your local computer and copy---probably better if you have a questionable connection.
Important: We have had a handful of issues with recording to the cloud which likely have to do with the overload at Zoom. Most importantly some recordings took over 24 hours to show up. This seems to be better now. Another issue is that cmu.zoom.us went down for about 30 minutes on Friday. Also Comcast went down in some areas last week. Given the increasing load on Zoom and local networks, you are advised to record locally and have contingency plans if the network goes down.
Zoom lists the participants live, and keeps a report of who attended. On your Zoom account page (cmu.zoom.us), go to the "Reports" menu item on the bottom left, then "Usage", then click the number under "Participants". It can even keep track if students take focus off of the zoom application for more than 30 seconds. If this is going to affect a “participation” part of the grade, make sure you tell the students.
You can also give a Canvas quiz at some point during the class.
Also, Panopto has continued attendance tracking and Zoom lectures can be uploaded to it. This means you can see what percentage of your students have viewed the lecture.
Recitations
Any special suggestions for recitations?
As with lectures you can use zoom, but most likely in a more interactive mode. One suggestion is to have worksheets available in PDF, or otherwise online, before the recitation. Then the recitation leader (probably TA) can work through them during recitation. Whether worksheets or not, the recitation leader can possibly use breakout rooms in zoom for discussions among smaller groups of students, and then bring them together to summarize their solutions. Innovation is welcome.
Office Hours
What should I do for office hours?
Zoom has a waiting room feature that allows you to admit students one by one, or in batches. It is probably worth having a tablet or writing surface for office hours. You can share both ways so both parties can see what they are writing.
You can also setup an office hours Queue at https://cmu.ohqueue.com/#/. Email Austin Schick <aschick@andrew.cmu.edu> to add your course to OHQ. They will set up an online queue which students can sign up in the order they arrived. TAs then go through the queue in order answering each student before moving onto the next. The TAs will find the student on Zoom as long as the student adds their Zoom personal link to their question.
Note that a student should not "remove" the TA/instructor from the call since this will "permanently" remove them. Instead they should let the TA/instructor hang up.
Should I use audio, chat, and/or video?
Chat is most likely sufficient for simple questions. We are sure you have all had a live chat with some business online, and it usually goes OK. For more involved problem solving, audio along with a writing surface is better.
Is it OK to have in person office hours?
We strongly discourage this, except for special cases and on request by the student and acceptance by you.
Exams and “In Class” Assessments
How do I give an exam or quiz?
If you already use online quizzes or exams, of course you should continue. If not, we suggest, for now, that you give open-book “take-home” exams. These could be during your regular exam time. One way to implement this is to send the students the exam as a pdf file at the start of “class” (via email, a link, or your existing assignment distribution system). They can then print it out, or use some form of pdf markup. When done they can scan it by taking photos on their mobile device. One such app is “Genius Scan”, which is free. The student can then submit via Gradescope, or similar tool. It is strongly advised you try a test run with the students, e.g., have them do a small quiz and submit. Some leeway for the students is likely necessary.
How do we prevent cheating?
As with any take-home exam, there is an element of trust that is required. You can ask your students to sign a cover sheet that says they did not collaborate with anyone else on the exam. We do not suggest making an online exam closed book.
What about various lockdown browsers (i.e., only allow access to specified web pages) for preventing cheating?
At present we are advising against these unless you have already used one. Our assessment is that they are not 100% portable across platforms, and are overly intrusive on the student platform. That being said, Respondus is available via Canvas at CMU using the Canvas quiz utility.
What options are there for interactive online quizzes or tests?
Canvas has a quiz feature. Gradescope has a quiz feature (in Beta). Diderot will soon have a quiz/exam feature. There is also Google forms. Whatever you use, consider how easy it will be for students to use.
Other suggestions?
You could replace an exam with a homework assignment.
You could reduce the weight of an exam. But, clearly communicate this to students.
You could replace an exam with multiple online quizzes. Again, clearly communicate this to students.
Assignments
What about assignments?
Most SCS courses already distribute and accept solutions for assignments online. Many tools are used, including Gradescope, Autolab, canvas, and github. Please continue. It is important that assignments are also handed back online. If you want help here, contact us.