- Joined
- Nov 4, 2017
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My school still gives in-person lectures with a few online modules throughout that are not mandatory. All lectures are recorded and available for student use. However, less than 10 students are actually regularly attending any of these sessions. My school has tried to implement question and answer sessions as well (seemingly transitioning into a "flipped classroom"), but students still don't attend these sessions.
Second-year students are focussed on mastering UFAP on their own. Is having any lecture or flipped classroom irrelevant? If these aren't being utilized by students, faculty seem to be wasting their time. I almost feel embarrassed for the lecturers who are speaking to an empty hall. Any opinions on what schools should look like moving forward? Should we basically be paying schools to administer us exams every so often to test our learning and be available for questions via email?
Second-year students are focussed on mastering UFAP on their own. Is having any lecture or flipped classroom irrelevant? If these aren't being utilized by students, faculty seem to be wasting their time. I almost feel embarrassed for the lecturers who are speaking to an empty hall. Any opinions on what schools should look like moving forward? Should we basically be paying schools to administer us exams every so often to test our learning and be available for questions via email?