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Resources
for Faculty and Advisers
What
You Should Know about Teaching a UITI Course
What
are your obligations as an instructor of a using information technology-intensive
(UITI) course? What freedom do you have in redesigning an existing
UITI course? The following guidelines will help answer these questions.
If you would like more information or assistance, contact Kellie
Price at x96970 or pricek@mail.etsu.edu.
Your UITI course should . . .
- require every student to actively
use information technology
In a UITI course, students should be expected to use current
information technology throughout the course. The use of information
technology should be integrated into the course as appropriate and
should account for a significant portion of the course.
- expect each student to use information
technology learned in CSCI 1100
When applicable, students should be required to use the skills
learned in CSCI 1100, Using Information Technology. These skills
include e-mail communication, internet searching, and word processing
using Microsoft Word. For a more detailed list of the topics covered
in CSCI 1100, go to the course website at http://deserve.etsu.edu/csci1100.
- involve students in learning new
information technology skills
These are skills beyond those taught in CSCI 1100. Since
these are new skills, the instructor must provide the instruction
necessary for the students to be able to complete assignments using
the new technologies.
- require students to use current information
technology throughout the semester to complete out-of-class assignments
Students should be required to complete assignments using
current information technology and the new skills learned in the
course. These assignments should be spread throughout the semester,
ensuring that students get sufficient hands-on experience with the
new technologies.
- base at least one credit hour's worth
of each student's final grade on his or her knowledge of these
new skills
The actual percentage of the final grade that the new skills
should account for is based upon the number of course credit hours.
If the course is a four-credit-hour course, it should be one-fourth
of the final grade. If it is a three-credit-hour course, it should
be one-third of the final grade. If it is a two-credit-hour course,
it should be one-half of the final grade. If it is a one-hour course,
it should be the entire grade.
Use
this
form to propose a course to be UIT-intensive and submit all
proposals to: UIT Proficiency Committee, Box 70711.
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