using blackboard communities for student government elections and orientation presented by john...

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Using Blackboard Communities for Student Government Elections and Orientation Presented by John Fritz & Bob Armstrong April 14, 2005

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Using Blackboard Communities for Student Government Elections and Orientation

Presented by John Fritz & Bob Armstrong April 14, 2005

2Copyright © UMBC 2005

Session Objectives

• Describe the UMBC Student Election Process

• Introduce the UMBC New Student Orientation Community

• Introduce the UMBC Online Placement Tests Pilot Program

3Copyright © UMBC 2005

Overview• Session Objectives

– Using communities effectively– Problem-solving with stakeholders

• Innovation– Using surveys for election ballots– Using assessments for placement exams

• Results/Outcomes– Highest student voter turnout ever– Eliminated extra trips for out-of-state students

4Copyright © UMBC 2005

About UMBC

• Founded in 1966• “Research extensive university”

Carnegie classification• 11,852 Students

– 9,668 undergrad, 2,184 grad• 949 Faculty

– 657 FT, 292 PT• Selected Brags

– One of 50 Best Colleges for Women

– 1st in undergrad chemistry degrees awarded to African Americans

– Six-time National College Chess Champions

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6Copyright © UMBC 2005

7Copyright © UMBC 2005

UMBC Blackboard Growth

Does not include distinct course sections

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100200

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500600

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8Copyright © UMBC 2005

Bb @ UMBC• Learning System Version 6.2.3• As of Spring 2005

– 600 Courses (per semester)– 420 Faculty– 225 Communities

• Includes all student, faculty and staff senates

• Staff: – 1 Server Admin– 2 FTE (Admin & Support) – 1 PT GA

Student Government Elections

10Copyright © UMBC 2005

Problem

• Historically low voter turnout

• Desire for easy, secure voting

• Homegrown online ballot process kept changing

• No time or resources to build or buy (and integrate) stand-alone process.

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Solution

• Enroll all eligible voters in a single Bb community• Use anonymous survey as the “ballot”• “Voters” are told they can vote more than once,

but only their last vote is recorded.• Election was conducted over a five-day period.• Student government can monitor who voted, but

not who they voted for.• Summary analysis can be printed as .pdf file and

posted.

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Results

• More than 2,000 students voted in the election, the SGA’s highest voter turnout ever.

• Other elections on Bb:– Honors Student Association– Professional Staff Senate– Graduate Council of Faculty– Greek organizations– Departmental “Teacher of the Year” nominations

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Issues

• Scale of Use– Bb doesn’t test for site enrollments > 1,000.– We couldn’t get results until three days after the

election.

• What’s a Vote?– Bb shows results as percentage of all votes cast, not

raw votes (version 6.x “download results” helps).

• Training & Support– Once voters start the ballot, they must finish– Can’t minimize screen, hit “back” button, etc.

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Next Steps

• SGA Election set for April 25-27, 2005 (nearly 10k users)

• Staff Senate Election set for early May (500 users).

• Graduate Council of Faculty just completed its elections (400 users)

16Copyright © UMBC 2005

Recommendations

• Don’t try this on anything but version 6.3– We upgraded hardware & software in 2004– We still can’t get results (Spring 2005 User Survey)

• Bb can (and will) through beta version of App Pack 3

• Start with small elections• Perhaps wait for Bb assessment initiative.• Build Election “sites” outside of Bb

– Sample ballot & candidate bios

17Copyright © UMBC 2005

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19Copyright © UMBC 2005

New Student Orientation

20Copyright © UMBC 2005

Orientation Community Goals

• Create a place to communicate & interact with incoming students

• Supplement summer student orientation• Initial content: course syllabi, orientation resources,

announcements, etc.• Provide an early exposure to Bb• Help students get prepared for placement tests• Orientation Evaluations• Postings for Study Groups

21Copyright © UMBC 2005

Community Building Process

• Initial meetings with Admissions staff to create goals• Bb staff created prototype with limited content• Tested prototype with student staff• Expanded content to include discussion areas for

feedback & link to chats• Admissions staff trained to administer the community• Eventual Student Enrollment

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• Instructions sent to students• Students create UMBC user ID/PW• Admissions generates an enrollment list• Bb admins batch enroll the students• Bb staff presentations at the on-campus

orientation sessions• Encouraged the use of evaluations

Student Process

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Participation

• 2,180 students enrolled (FA2004 semester)• 270 responses to freshman evaluation• 134 responses to transfer evaluation• 60 posts to the new book forum• 2 posts on the study group forum

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Recommendations

• Focus on good Bb communication techniques• Improve the current process• Provide incentives to users• Test your ideas with existing students• Train support staff to take over

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Online Placement Tests

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Why Online Tests?• Convenient for out-of-state students• Savings in staff time• More time for other things on orientation days• Immediate results on tests• Easy to print essays for readers

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• Initial meetings with Math/English to present options• Generated assessments and designed community• Initial testing with student staff • Refined instructions & admin process• Tested a group of 250 students this Winter• Modified instructions to include computer requirements• Next pilot end of April

Building Process

28Copyright © UMBC 2005

Community Design

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Challenges

• Getting buy-in from English/Math Depts. • Enrolling students (self-enroll vs. batch?)• Creating an easy-to-use site for first time users• Eliminating copy/paste/print of exams• Printing English Writing tests to be read by staff• Limitations of the assessment timer• Technical support

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Student Comments

“I liked that it was online and I was able to take it when it was convenient.”

“Finally, the ability to receive math scores immediately after completing the test. Very convenient.”

“I liked that I could type on the computer and that I would not have had to come all the way to UMBC to complete the test. I find that I can write better and faster on the computer.”

“I was given creative freedom...I sit in front of a computer and contemplate on ideas when I'm writing the average term paper.  Taking this exam felt natural.”

31Copyright © UMBC 2005

Recommendations

• Test, test, and test some more.• Make sure all parties aware of the limitations• Promote Bb’s ease of use & instant grading etc.• Anticipate potential support issue

32Copyright © UMBC 2005

Questions & Comments??

Presentation online: http://www.umbc.edu/blackboard

33Copyright © UMBC 2005

Contact Us!!

John FritzDirector,UMBC New Media Learning & [email protected]

Bob ArmstrongInstructional Designer – Primary Bb Support, UMBC New Media Learning & [email protected]