| Differences between revisions 5 and 7 (spanning 2 versions) | Back to page |
|
Size: 1275
Comment:
|
Size: 1288
Comment:
|
| Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
| Line 5: | Line 5: |
| * Students who try hard (e.g. working hard, being curious and not being afraid to show uncertainty while being open) will get noticed. | * Students who try hard (e.g. working hard, being curious and not being afraid to show uncertainty while being open and thoughtful) will get noticed. |
| Line 16: | Line 16: |
| What is the benefit of getting noticed? It may be of crucial help, if your grade ends up near the grade boundary. | What is the benefit of getting noticed? It may be of crucial help, if your grade ends up near a grade boundary. |
Good deeds policy
For any course that I teach, there is a good deeds policy. It is very simple.
- Students who try hard (e.g. working hard, being curious and not being afraid to show uncertainty while being open and thoughtful) will get noticed.
- Students who contribute much (e.g. leading discussions) will get noticed.
There are many concrete ways one gets noticed.
- Classroom discussions.
- Office hour discussions.
- On-line discussions.
For the last one, the new forum system that I have has a vote feature, which I expect will help me notice good deeds in the forum discussions. I will vote positively if a student shows more than casual effort. I believe other students will vote positively when they see good deeds by students. However, it is not possible to vote negatively, unless enough reputation is accrued -- so I hope we don't worry about it for the most part. For instance, I feel that I have given enough clues to the ''work energy'' theorem question. I'd be really happy if a student provides a good answer. My giving an answer is really not meaningful at all, because, really, you are the one!
What is the benefit of getting noticed? It may be of crucial help, if your grade ends up near a grade boundary.