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Claremont Colleges

Journal

2022

Emergency remote teaching

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Navigating A Calculus Course During A Pandemic: A Usma Perspective, Shane K. Smith, Tyson H. Walsh, Lee Evans Jan 2022

Navigating A Calculus Course During A Pandemic: A Usma Perspective, Shane K. Smith, Tyson H. Walsh, Lee Evans

Journal of Humanistic Mathematics

In this article we analyze publications written about different teaching modalities and evaluate how each applies to a calculus class during the on-going COVID-19 pandemic. We focus on the positives and negatives of teaching and learning in a virtual, classroom, or HyFlex environment. Although arguments could be made for each environment, especially given different institutional objectives, this work aims to explain why we eventually preferred teaching our Fall 2020 multivariable calculus course in a face-to-face classroom setting at the United States Military Academy at West Point. We also offer measures of performance to compare the current COVID-19 semester with previous …


Unmotivated, Depressed, Anxious: Impact Of The Covid-19 Emergency Transition To Remote Learning On Undergraduates’ Math Anxiety, Melinda Lanius, Tiffany Frugé Jones, Samantha Kao, Tynan Lazarus, Alex Farrell Jan 2022

Unmotivated, Depressed, Anxious: Impact Of The Covid-19 Emergency Transition To Remote Learning On Undergraduates’ Math Anxiety, Melinda Lanius, Tiffany Frugé Jones, Samantha Kao, Tynan Lazarus, Alex Farrell

Journal of Humanistic Mathematics

In summer 2020, we invited the 6761 undergraduate students who took a Spring 2020 math course at the University of Arizona to participate in a survey, with 13% responding. We asked about their experience with the emergency transition to remote learning and measured their math anxiety before and after the transition using the well-established Abbreviated Math Anxiety Scale(AMAS). “Unmotivated, depressed, anxious” are the words one undergraduate used to describe their emergency transition to remote learning. Our results indicate that limited access to quality technology and inadequate communication with an instructor were the two greatest predictors for an increase in math …