Thanks for inviting me to the party: Virtual poster sessions as a way to connect in a time of disconnection

Abstract COVID‐19 presented the world with trauma and isolation, but many people, including educators, have offered bright spots of creativity and engagement. As we confronted these issues in our own ecology classroom, we sought solutions to carry‐forward the learning objectives we set for our stude...

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Main Authors: Emily A. Holt, Ashley B. Heim, Erin Tessens, Robert Walker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-11-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6756
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spelling doaj-d37d44192e794bafa9bfa3c6c63ebecf2021-04-02T17:00:19ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-11-011022124231243010.1002/ece3.6756Thanks for inviting me to the party: Virtual poster sessions as a way to connect in a time of disconnectionEmily A. Holt0Ashley B. Heim1Erin Tessens2Robert Walker3School of Biological Sciences University of Northern Colorado Greeley Colorado USASchool of Biological Sciences University of Northern Colorado Greeley Colorado USASchool of Biological Sciences University of Northern Colorado Greeley Colorado USASchool of Biological Sciences University of Northern Colorado Greeley Colorado USAAbstract COVID‐19 presented the world with trauma and isolation, but many people, including educators, have offered bright spots of creativity and engagement. As we confronted these issues in our own ecology classroom, we sought solutions to carry‐forward the learning objectives we set for our students in January 2020, yet encourage interaction with the sensitivity that a pandemic requires. In the rapid transition to online course delivery, we opted to retain the original end‐of‐semester poster project in our introductory ecology course. However, we experimented with a new virtual platform where students could disseminate their work and communicate with the community. In this paper, we discuss the Mozilla Hubs virtual reality platform that we used for our event. We also collected qualitative data to share the benefits and challenges of this experience felt by the students, the instructors, and external observers.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6756ecologyMozilla Hubsonline teaching and learningundergraduatesvirtual poster session
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emily A. Holt
Ashley B. Heim
Erin Tessens
Robert Walker
spellingShingle Emily A. Holt
Ashley B. Heim
Erin Tessens
Robert Walker
Thanks for inviting me to the party: Virtual poster sessions as a way to connect in a time of disconnection
Ecology and Evolution
ecology
Mozilla Hubs
online teaching and learning
undergraduates
virtual poster session
author_facet Emily A. Holt
Ashley B. Heim
Erin Tessens
Robert Walker
author_sort Emily A. Holt
title Thanks for inviting me to the party: Virtual poster sessions as a way to connect in a time of disconnection
title_short Thanks for inviting me to the party: Virtual poster sessions as a way to connect in a time of disconnection
title_full Thanks for inviting me to the party: Virtual poster sessions as a way to connect in a time of disconnection
title_fullStr Thanks for inviting me to the party: Virtual poster sessions as a way to connect in a time of disconnection
title_full_unstemmed Thanks for inviting me to the party: Virtual poster sessions as a way to connect in a time of disconnection
title_sort thanks for inviting me to the party: virtual poster sessions as a way to connect in a time of disconnection
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract COVID‐19 presented the world with trauma and isolation, but many people, including educators, have offered bright spots of creativity and engagement. As we confronted these issues in our own ecology classroom, we sought solutions to carry‐forward the learning objectives we set for our students in January 2020, yet encourage interaction with the sensitivity that a pandemic requires. In the rapid transition to online course delivery, we opted to retain the original end‐of‐semester poster project in our introductory ecology course. However, we experimented with a new virtual platform where students could disseminate their work and communicate with the community. In this paper, we discuss the Mozilla Hubs virtual reality platform that we used for our event. We also collected qualitative data to share the benefits and challenges of this experience felt by the students, the instructors, and external observers.
topic ecology
Mozilla Hubs
online teaching and learning
undergraduates
virtual poster session
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6756
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