Anonymous wrote:No wonder UMD humanties programs are much lower ranked than the physical sciences. This does not happen there. And it is stupid. Why pay a lot of money for online teaching? If you just want a something more akin to a certificate, not a degree, go to community college. ( I know I know... community colleges grant degrees. but they are more like certificates that a person has certain facts memorized. They cost a lot less per credit hour)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many Friday classes are already conducted online.
Really? Why?
Not sure what pp was referring to but it’s not true.
My husband is a professor there. It is certainly true for many humanities department classes for all but 400-level classes. Typically the class meets 3x per week; 2x in person and 1x online. Strong pressure on faculty to include the online component in his department. Faculty handle it differently.
Some post a brief video and then students react or discuss via a Facebook-type interface. Others use it to reinforce subjects students may have struggled with in a recent exam.
The online bit is probably due to all the $$ they save by not running facilities. UMD has already made a ton of money out of University of MD University College (their open enrollment online campus kind of like University of Phoenix) now they want to expand to the flagship campus. Huge red flag.
Every school is offering classes online... even top 25 schools... wake up old people.
Anonymous wrote:They are literally cancelling classes... for football.
https://wtop.com/prince-georges-county/2019/07/u-md-to-cancel-classes-clear-campus-before-penn-state-football-game/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many Friday classes are already conducted online.
Really? Why?
Not sure what pp was referring to but it’s not true.
My husband is a professor there. It is certainly true for many humanities department classes for all but 400-level classes. Typically the class meets 3x per week; 2x in person and 1x online. Strong pressure on faculty to include the online component in his department. Faculty handle it differently.
Some post a brief video and then students react or discuss via a Facebook-type interface. Others use it to reinforce subjects students may have struggled with in a recent exam.
The online bit is probably due to all the $$ they save by not running facilities. UMD has already made a ton of money out of University of MD University College (their open enrollment online campus kind of like University of Phoenix) now they want to expand to the flagship campus. Huge red flag.
Anonymous wrote:For a crappy football team, UMD goes to a lot of trouble to accommodate them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many Friday classes are already conducted online.
Really? Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many Friday classes are already conducted online.
Really? Why?
Not sure what pp was referring to but it’s not true.
My husband is a professor there. It is certainly true for many humanities department classes for all but 400-level classes. Typically the class meets 3x per week; 2x in person and 1x online. Strong pressure on faculty to include the online component in his department. Faculty handle it differently.
Some post a brief video and then students react or discuss via a Facebook-type interface. Others use it to reinforce subjects students may have struggled with in a recent exam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Professor’s spouse lady is not doing UMD any favor. Are you sure this is not your DH’s Dept only?
My spouse has tenure, so I could really care less. And yes, I am sure that his department isn't the only one.
This isn't just happening at UMD. Not defending it, but doing some portions of classes online saves the university money by conserving energy and class space.
Examples outside of DH's department:
English 101 https://www.english.umd.edu/academics/academicwriting/BlendedLearning
Psych 100: https://app.testudo.umd.edu/soc/201801/PSYC/PSYC100
Health 301 https://sph.umd.edu/sites/default/files/files/BCH/BCH%20Syllabus%2017-18/DBCH_HLTH301_Fall2017_Slopen.pdf
Online teaching resources for faculty --
https://tltc.umd.edu/event/moving-online-course-design-and-development-retreat
https://tltc.umd.edu/options
Anonymous wrote:Professor’s spouse lady is not doing UMD any favor. Are you sure this is not your DH’s Dept only?