Advice for Adding Active Zoom Sessions in Face-to-Face Classes

Last week we emailed and encouraged all of you who are scheduled to teach on campus this fall to confirm the equipment and capabilities of your assigned classrooms. We are hearing that some of you are asking for classrooms equipped to let you live-stream your class sessions so that students who are unable to attend in person can attend via zoom. In the ideal situation, classes like that would be designed and taught in “hy-flex classrooms” equipped with ceiling microphones, multiple large displays to show the faces of students attending remotely, and multiple cameras so that remote students can see the instructor and the students in the classroom. We have only a handful of true hy-flex classrooms available on campus. Other classrooms in HSB and the Conservatory have been modified for specific remote teaching purposes including placing limitations on Zoom and other features.

As an alternative to hy-flex teaching, several of you have proposed to live stream from a traditional ILE classroom using an active zoom session during your class session. We want to be sure you are aware that there are significant limitations to this approach and share some strategies to consider that could help address those limitations.

Limitations of using the camera on most classroom computers for zoom during class:

  • students attending by zoom will see and hear only you
  • you will need to stay close to the camera
  • students attending by zoom will not be able to hear questions or discussion from students in the classroom because the only microphone is at the podium or on you
  • students attending by zoom may not be able to ask questions, even via chat in zoom, unless you are able to consistently monitor the zoom window while teaching

Ways to mitigate the limitations:

  • If using only the classroom computer’s camera, turn the camera toward the class from time to time;
  • When students in the classroom ask questions or make comments, repeat the question or comment so that students attending by zoom can benefit;
  •  If you have a laptop or tablet, consider bringing it to the classroom, signing into the zoom session on the laptop or tablet, and leaving it turned toward the class for the full class session;
  • If students sitting in the classroom have their own laptops or tablets in class, consider inviting them to connect to the zoom session too, but keeping their speakers on mute or using earbuds to prevent audio interference in the room. Students in the classroom connected to the zoom session could help monitor the chat by letting you know if they see the chat light up on your laptop or theirs. Asking students to be part of the solution may increase their sense of being an active part the learning community.

General strategies to keep in mind if using this zoom approach:

  • To make the session content available asynchronously, the instructor will need to record the zoom session.  If both Zoom and Panopto are enabled in your Canvas course site, then any Zoom meeting scheduled from within Canvas and recorded will automatically be saved in your course Panopto folder and will be available to all the students in your course. This is the simplest way to make Zoom class recordings available to all the students in your course for asynchronous consumption.
  • When you record the zoom session, select the option to record to the cloud. This generates better auto-captions than does Panopto and will automatically send your recordings into your course Panopto folder.
  • When setting up the zoom session for each class, consider using a recurring meeting so that students do not have to track down a unique zoom link for each session.

Use of Webcams in Online Learning and Student Privacy

Event Details

Use of Webcams in Online Learning and Student Privacy

Many faculty have asked questions about how to manage the use of cameras, including whether or not they can require students to have cameras, and whether or not they can require students to turn on the cameras during synchronous class meetings. While the policy provides insights, this workshop provides the opportunity to ask questions.

Presenter(s): 

  • Amy Cole, UMKC Registrar
  • Heather Hunt, Faculty Fellow for Strategic Initiatives, Office of eLearning at University of Missouri System
  • Charles Rigdon, Technology Resource Coordinator at University of Missouri
  • Danna Wren, Senior Director of Academic Technology at University of Missouri System
  • TBD – UM System attorney

Event format descriptions are available at UMKC PROFFCourses.

Registration Link

After signing up for this event, you will receive an email confirmation. Prior to the event, you will receive a second email containing the Zoom invite link.

Communication, Engagement, and Community

Collaboration and online interactions. Learner to learner interaction can be achieved by assigning small group projects, by requesting responses to discussion board postings and by engaging students through peer-evaluated assignments or critiques (QM Standard 5.1). In this session, we will discuss our experiences with a variety of interactions and online engagement, such as peer-evaluated assignments, oral interviews in foreign language, VoiceThread, and Canvas discussion boards (inviting the audience to share also). Finally, we will discuss our collaborative engagement in messaging with students, providing feedback on the assignments and setting productive communication guidelines.

Event Details

Presenters:  Kelley Melvin, Foreign Languages and Literatures,  and Viviana Grieco, Department of History and Latin American and Latinx Studies

Academic Unit: College of Arts and Sciences

Bios: https://cas.umkc.edu/directory/melvin-kelley/  https://cas.umkc.edu/directory/grieco-viviana/

Event format descriptions are available at UMKC PROFFCourses.

Registration Link

After signing up for this event, you will receive an email confirmation. Prior to the event, you will receive a second email containing the Zoom invite link.

July 21 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm CDT

Collaboration and online interactions. Learner to learner interaction can be achieved by assigning small group projects, by requesting responses to discussion board postings and by engaging students through peer-evaluated assignments or critiques (QM Standard 5.1). In this session, we will discuss our experiences with a variety of interactions and online engagement, such as peer-evaluated assignments, oral interviews in foreign language, VoiceThread, and Canvas discussion boards (inviting the audience to share also). Finally, we will discuss our collaborative engagement in messaging with students, providing feedback on the assignments and setting productive communication guidelines.

Event Details

Presenters:

Kelley Melvin, Dept of Foreign Languages

Viviana Grieco, History & Latin American and Latinx Studies

Event format descriptions are available at UMKC PROFFCourses.

Registration Link

After signing up for this event, you will receive an email confirmation. Prior to the event, you will receive a second email containing the Zoom invite link.

Emulating the Physical Classroom Experience Online

July 8 @ 10:00 am – 11:00 am CDT

This brief session will revolve around the online class interaction techniques that Dr. Rahman experimented during the Spring’20 semester. The focus will be on student engagement and learning. Continuous assessment techniques per lesson will be discussed to bridge students learning gap due to the move to online.

Event Details

Presenter:

  • Mostafizur Rahman
  • Mostafizur Rahman is an Assistant Professor in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering at University of Missouri-Kansas City. He leads the Nanoscale Computing group at UMKC. His group’s research focus is on unconventional computing architectures for efficiency, hardware security, and hardware intelligence. His research is funded by NSF, Navy, Industry and UM Internal Funds.

Event format descriptions are available at UMKC PROFFCourses.

Registration Link

After signing up for this event, you will receive an email confirmation. Prior to the event, you will receive a second email containing the Zoom invite link.

Service-Learning Goes Online

July 14 @ 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm CDT

Service-learning is possible for online courses, both synchronous and asynchronous. It can also be format flexible and adaptable should we move online again. Come to this virtual popup session to share ideas, learn about new resources, and generally brainstorm.

Objectives

  • Learn about 3 new resources
  • Pose questions to colleagues
  • Celebrate Bastille Day

Event Details

Presenter: Alexis Petri, director of faculty support, interim director of service-learning, and associate research professor

Unit: Office of the Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor

Bio: service-learning bio

Event format descriptions are available at UMKC PROFFCourses.

Registration Link

After signing up for this event, you will receive an email confirmation. Prior to the event, you will receive a second email containing the Zoom invite link.

 

Active Learning within Zoom – Using Polls, Breakout Rooms and Whiteboards

July 10, 2020 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

Why active learning? Because students learning in an online environment experience interactions with you and/or their classmates differently than in a traditional face-to-face course and the evidence overwhelmingly supports that students that are engaged in the learning process, actually achieve higher levels of learning. Join us for a panel discussion on the use of various Zoom tools that promote active engagement in the classroom.

Session Objectives:

After participating in the PROFF session, participants will be able to:

  1. Recognize and understand the importance of active learning in the classroom, specifically the online classroom.
  2. Understand the rationale behind utilizing breakout rooms, be able to set-up, and facilitate breakout rooms in Zoom.
  3. Implement the use of polls in Zoom.
  4. Recognize the potential of using whiteboards as a means for student-faculty interaction.

Event Details

Presenters:

  • Tanya Mitchell, Professor & Director, Graduate Dental Hygiene Education Program
  • Lorie Holt, Associate Professor & Director, Degree Completion Studies, Division of Dental Hygiene
  • Keerthana Satheesh, Associate Professor & Chair, Department of Periodontics

Academic Unit: School of Dentistry

Bios: Lorie Holt  | Tanya Villalpando Mitchell  | Keerthana Satheesh

Event format descriptions are available at UMKC PROFFCourses.

Registration Link

After signing up for this event, you will receive an email confirmation. Prior to the event, you will receive a second email containing the Zoom invite link.

What We’ve Learned From Students About Online Teaching and Learning

July 9 @ 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm CDT

This session will feature a small panel of faculty describing the lessons they’ve learned about students, and the tips and tricks (or words of wisdom?) these faculty wish to share with those preparing to teach online this fall. The panel presentation will be followed by a Q&A period and the opportunity to brainstorm ideas for how faculty might address specific needs in their own classes.

Event Details

Presenters:

  • Kati Toivanen, Professor, Studio Art, College of Arts and Sciences
  • Joe Parisi, Curators’ Distinguished Professor, Instrumental Music Education, Associate Director of Bands, & Director of IPhD Program
  • Stephanie Van Rhein, Lecturer, College of Arts and Sciences

Event format descriptions are available at UMKC PROFFCourses.

Registration Link

After signing up for this event, you will receive an email confirmation. Prior to the event, you will receive a second email containing the Zoom invite link.