The COVID pandemic has affected virtually all aspects of society. The tragic loss of life and public health state of affairs, business and educational disruption, and stay at home virtual world are just some our recent experiences. What have we learned from this inflection point? What have we discovered that helps us cope or that we really don’t need?
- Introductory Remarks
01:00pm – 01:05pm USA / Canada – Pacific – April 6, 2021
- Strategies for mastering organic chemistry in a virtual teaching world
01:05pm – 01:30pm USA / Canada – Pacific – April 6, 2021
Susan Schelble, Presenter
- Comparison of homework completion rates and impact on student success prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic in a general chemistry course at a large, urban, public university in the Northeast
01:30pm – 01:55pm USA / Canada – Pacific – April 6, 2021
Kelly Elkins, Presenter | Joseph Bushey | Nicole Carbonaro | david kamber | Liina Ladon | Seakwoo Lee | Sreya Mukherjee | Michael Pacella | sonali raje | Shannon Stitzel | Courtney Thomas
- Activities to enhance engagement and interactions in remote instruction
01:55pm – 02:20pm USA / Canada – Pacific – April 6, 2021
Daniel Lambrecht, Presenter
- Intermission
02:20pm – 02:25pm USA / Canada – Pacific – April 6, 2021
- How online teaching made me more accessible, helped me get to know my students, and cultivate my practice of antideficit behaviors
02:25pm – 02:50pm USA / Canada – Pacific – April 6, 2021
Thomas Higgins, Presenter
- STEMM in crisis: lessons from a text-based crisis hotline
02:50pm – 03:15pm USA / Canada – Pacific – April 6, 2021
Emmett Leddin, Presenter | Stephanie Huard | AJ Bryant | Noéh Juarez | Joshua Hong | Lilian Martinez | K. Ryder Fox
- What went well, what didn’t, and hope for the future: COVID practices during a socially distanced semester
03:15pm – 03:40pm USA / Canada – Pacific – April 6, 2021
Frankie Wood-Black, Presenter
- Discussion
03:40pm – 04:00pm USA / Canada – Pacific – April 6, 2021
Event Timeslots (1)
Tuesday April 6, 2021
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The COVID pandemic has affected virtually all aspects of society. The tragic loss of life and public health state of affairs, business and educational disruption, and stay at home virtual world are just some our recent experiences. What have we learned from this inflection point? What have we discovered that helps us cope or that we really don't need?