In a race against two calendars鈥攁cademic and pandemic鈥攈ow did SA国际传媒 transform in less than two weeks from a high-touch curriculum to a remote learning model?
鈥淗ello from Rat Graveyard,鈥 Ben Smith 鈥20 writes, and classmate Lindsee Diaz smiles and waves from her home in National City, some 130 miles away. 鈥淲e have a lot of weird [off-campus] house names around SA国际传媒,鈥 Diaz explains to the YouTube audience for the live preshow to the 2020 Media Arts and Culture Production Comprehensives鈥攁 virtual film festival showcasing the work of 13 MAC seniors. 鈥淚t feels really great that we can still do this, and I鈥檓 very thankful that now people who maybe couldn鈥檛 watch it previously can now tune in. So, that鈥檚 awesome.鈥
鈥淭hank you to everyone who is watching far and wide,鈥 adds co-host Asher Tessier 鈥20 from his home in Thorndike, Mass. 鈥淭his is not what we anticipated doing.鈥Nearly two hours later, when the credits rolled on the last student film, close to 200 viewers had tuned in鈥攁nd the festival became the most visible manifestation of the swift turn of events that swept through the SA国际传媒 academic calendar this spring. Classes and lectures and comps had gone digital, and remote learning鈥攚hile not a full-blooded substitute for the campus experience鈥攈ad demonstrated the ability of students, faculty, and staff to roll with the changes.
The April 18 livestream was the handiwork of Diana Keeler 鈥09, SA国际传媒鈥檚 manager of digital production, who worked remotely with the 13 production seniors in her Advanced Editing class in the weeks leading up to the festival just to get their films finished on time. 鈥淭he idea was to create a virtual event that had different elements鈥攁 premiere of their films, a place viewers could comment, and a digital program in one place,鈥 she explains. 鈥淲e wanted it to be a synchronous screening where people all over the world could be watching simultaneously, so we set it up as a YouTube premiere with a countdown to a show that we could all watch together.鈥
鈥淚 have been looking forward to the MAC鈥坰creenings in鈥圱horne Hall since I was a first-year,鈥濃圖iaz admits during the preshow. 鈥淏ut you know what?鈥圱his is the new age 鈥 and I鈥檓 feeling good, frankly.鈥
For students in SA国际传媒鈥檚 44 majors and minors, the College鈥檚 foray into remote learning officially began March 23, following an extended spring break. But for James Uhrich, vice president for information technology services and chief information officer, and his team, the process began before there was even a COVID-19. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to know where to start,鈥 Uhrich says in an interview April 9. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been such a circus and arguably still is.鈥
So, let鈥檚 begin at the beginning: A small group of senior administrators had worked during the fall 2019 semester on outlining what resources were available at the College as related to academic continuity planning. 鈥淲e knew the College had to have plans in place for regular emergency preparedness鈥攈ow we would be able to deliver remote education for a week or 10 days in the event of an earthquake or other natural disaster,鈥 says Uhrich. In January, he shared a framework of available resources as well as what Occidental would need to continue instruction with the Emergency Operations Committee.
As the coronavirus situation began to develop earlier this semester, he adds, 鈥淲e realized we had to take those plans and make them happen.鈥 When Wendy Sternberg, vice president for academic affairs and dean of the College, updated faculty about academic continuity planning in a March 3 email, 鈥淎t that moment we went from a shared set of documents for internal planning purposes to a situation where we knew this was not theoretical anymore.鈥
In moving 200-plus faculty and over 2,000 students online, 鈥淭he biggest challenge was not making sure that the system worked鈥攊t was making sure the system worked for each faculty member鈥檚 classes based on the way that they teach,鈥 says Uhrich, who joined the College in 2010. 鈥淚t was an unprecedented volume of work, more than I鈥檝e ever experienced in my two-decade-old career.鈥BlueJeans鈥攁 video conferencing platform the College has used since 2013鈥斺渨as one of the resources on our emergency planning list, one of the five or so apps we knew would be central to maintaining our continuity of education,鈥濃坔e explains. (It also didn鈥檛 have all the bells and whistles that the situation called for, which is why the College has augmented it with Zoom鈥攖he video app equivalent of Coke to BlueJeans鈥 Pepsi.)
Working with the newly formed Academic Continuity Execution (ACE) team, 鈥淚 could not have asked for a more responsive and helpful support system,鈥 says Peter Dreier, the E.P. Clapp Distinguished Professor of Politics, who is teaching two politics courses鈥擴rban Politics and Policy and Democratic Socialism鈥攖his semester. In addition to doing test runs using BlueJeans in advance of his first class, he says, members of the library team were extremely helpful in making e-books available to his students and digitizing several films for his courses so students could watch them at home.
鈥淚鈥檝e gotten quite a few emails from students saying that they enjoy the class,鈥 Dreier says. 鈥淎ttendance has been excellent so far. In fact, more students 鈥榮how up鈥 for class than they did during the first half of the semester. Also, more students actually participate in the class discussion. I think they are relieved to have some kind of normal activity every day by attending the class sessions and are more likely to participate.鈥
Students in a BlueJeans session of Tom Burkdall鈥檚 Writing on Travel class were transported to the virtual classroom through photos taken by Helena de Lemos, Special Collections instruction and research librarian. From their homes, students examined images spanning from the 18th to the 21st centuries culled from SA国际传媒鈥檚 Special Collections and College Archives鈥攍ocales ranging from England鈥檚 Lake District to Yosemite National Park. 鈥淗elena talked about the context of the materials,鈥濃坰ays Burkdall, associate professor of writing and rhetoric. 鈥淚t was a great exercise in bringing historical elements to courses, no matter where everyone is.鈥
鈥淥ne of our guiding principles on the academic continuity planning team has been we will do everything we can to get faculty and students whatever they need to successfully deliver the curriculum,鈥 Uhrich says. Regardless of their role, 鈥淓veryone has a singleness of purpose and the goal of keeping SA国际传媒 vital and operating, and that shared purpose is bringing people together in ways I haven鈥檛 seen.鈥
Twice a week, music production instructor Jongnic 鈥淛B鈥 Bontemps uses a new video platform called Panopto to record his lectures from his home studio. 鈥淧anopto is great in that it captures both video of me and my desktop and combines it all into one video feed,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 much like the classroom experience鈥攕tudents can see me and watch what I am doing on screen.鈥 An added feature of the platform is the ability for students to rewatch or rewind the lessons if they didn鈥檛 get something the first time.
Bontemps augments the Panopto lessons and discussions on Moodle (an online platform) with weekly Zoom sessions where the class can interact more directly. 鈥淪tudents learn so much from each other鈥檚 questions,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an important part of their learning.鈥For Kathryn Leonard, professor and chair of computer science, the move online has not changed her approach to her lessons for the two classes she is teaching this spring, even if it has changed their delivery. 鈥淚 have students in almost every time zone for the junior seminar class [Second Stage Writing], so that class has moved to asynchronous鈥擨 post activities for them to do on their own schedule,鈥 she says. 鈥淔or the research course, I鈥檓 meeting with students in their subgroups鈥攁nd each week, one subgroup posts a video presentation of their project status on a Slack channel that we all belong to, and the rest of us can ask questions and make comments.鈥
Leonard shares her teaching space with two cats, 鈥渨ho ignore me until I鈥檓 talking on a video call鈥攖hen they desperately need my love and affection. But I like those interruptions鈥攊t always lightens the mood.鈥
Before spring break, Nalsey Tinberg reached a milestone鈥攅ven if she didn鈥檛 realize it at the time. 鈥淯nknowingly I had taught my last 鈥榠n-person鈥 class, and that was a moment for me,鈥 says the longtime professor of mathematics, who joined the SA国际传媒 faculty in 1980 and is taking a sabbatical year prior to her official retirement in August 2021.
Working with Jacob Sargent, training and support team lead for ACE, Tinberg got a tutorial in BlueJeans and Zoom for conferencing. The most challenging thing about adapting to distance learning, she says, has been 鈥渁djusting to the technology while trying to maintain the same kind of classroom structures and interactions.鈥
In lieu of day-to-day assignments in her Calculus 1B and Linear Algebra classes, 鈥淚 have gone to set our weekly expectations so that students have a bit more freedom,鈥 she adds. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know the pressures they are under from other classes or family issues.鈥
Teaching from her home office, which is also her guest room, Irene Girton has embraced the demands of remote learning with a vigor that belies the fact that this is also her last semester in the classroom. 鈥淚n anticipation of my upcoming departure from teaching, I had just recently downsized my desk to a much smaller one鈥攏ot great timing,鈥 says the professor of music, who has taught at SA国际传媒 since 2000 and is also on sabbatical next year. 鈥淚 have an old Steinway upright that鈥檚 an OK substitute for the wonderful grand pianos I鈥檓 used to using in Booth 204, and all the online media I鈥檝e always used in class are still available to me.鈥
In adapting to remote learning, Girton reconciled the balance between teaching specific compositional and analytic skills and techniques, 鈥渨hich are very time-intensive and require considerable one-on-one attention,鈥 and presenting broader theoretical concepts by creating video presentations relating to those specific skills and techniques.
鈥淚f I teach music theory to students as a way of thinking about music鈥攚ith clarity, specificity, and in cultural, historical, technical, aesthetic, and emotional context鈥攖hen I鈥檝e done the best job I can do,鈥 she says.
In 鈥渢his brave new virtual world,鈥 Sophal Ear, associate professor of diplomacy and world affairs (DWA), feels he has come close to replicating the in-person classroom experience. Livestreaming back-to-back sections of his Introduction to Global Political Economy鈥攁 required class for DWA majors鈥擡ar has seen a boost in attendance from earlier in the semester, when he was teaching his class in Johnson Hall 314, one of the balcony rooms above Choi Auditorium. 鈥淚t takes incredible concentration when you are focused on a computer screen trying to sound erudite and witty, but also thoughtful and deep, all while delivering your slides and trying to engage students whose faces you don鈥檛 all see,鈥 Ear says. Because he can鈥檛 stand up and walk around the classroom, he adds, after nearly three hours at the computer, 鈥淵ou are extremely sorry you did this to your back.鈥
COVID-19 has already found its way into his syllabus. 鈥淢y first class was supposed to be about behavioral and institutional critiques of liberal political economy but ended being mostly about the political economy of COVID-19,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 think every class will have a bit about that. It鈥檚 inescapable.鈥 (It鈥檚 also the topic of his third book manuscript: Viral Sovereignty and the Political Economy of Pandemics: What Explains How Countries Handle Outbreaks?)
The pandemic has found its way into other class curricula as well. For Health and Humanity, an eight-unit course in SA国际传媒鈥檚 Cultural Studies Program that uses interdisciplinary tools to study various elements of health and medicine, professor Kristi Upson-Saia (religious studies) and associate professors Brandon Lehr (economics) and Clair Morrissey (philosophy) pivoted away from the content they had planned prior to COVID-19 and asked students to analyze the pandemic using the skills they had learned prior to spring break. In the following weeks the professors broadened their gaze to the history of pandemics dating back to the ancient Mediterranean.
Not every class can be translated to virtual work. Absent the ability to do hands-on experiments, Professor of Biology Roberta Pollock鈥檚 Bio 395 students spent the remainder of the semester 鈥渢alking about their project, our data, and where we were going,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was a huge disappointment.鈥 Although it was no substitute for in-person presentations, many of her biochemistry seminar seniors completed their comps by posting their presentations online.
Despite the physical challenges of remote learning, Pollock says, 鈥淭he pandemic has brought us closer together. It seems easier for many students to meet virtually rather than having to come to my physical office. It helped me personally to be able to help them.鈥
鈥淓ven with all the challenges and obstacles in their way, all 13 of my seniors not only finished their comps projects but excelled in their execution,鈥濃圞eeler says of her MAC production students. 鈥淭hey told me how they had a group chat going, and they weren鈥檛 going to let anyone slip through the cracks, especially not after coming this far. While they might be miles apart now, their SA国际传媒 community spirit is strong, and it鈥檚 for them that I try to give my best every day.鈥
Ear concurs. 鈥淲e are all apart and yet we are sharing space we would never have on campus. A cat sneezes. There鈥檚 a huge library of books in the background of one student鈥檚 video shot, and in another there鈥檚 artwork that a student鈥檚 mom got from Africa. We are all experiencing the same dislocations. They may be back in their childhood bedrooms, but I鈥檓 also broadcasting from my 产别诲谤辞辞尘.鈥