期刊
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL EDUCATION
卷 97, 期 9, 页码 3413-3417出版社
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jchemed.0c00546
关键词
First-Year Undergraduate/General; Second-Year Undergraduate; Upper-Division Undergraduate; Curriculum; Distance; Learning/Self-Instruction; Ethics
The swift conversion of chemistry courses to various online formats has presented challenges for students and instructors alike, with one of the most significant challenges being the logistics concerning online testing. At our institution, instructors of general, organic, and physical chemistry courses sought to balance issues of exam access, exam security, and continuity with a traditional test format when switching to unproctored online exams. Different approaches were utilized for exam delivery with varying success. Common challenges arose in several courses, such as the need to train students to use new technology, and the threat of online information for compromising exam security. The most successful attempts to meet these challenges, such as use of a test-bank, are consistent with reported best practices and suggest a way to maximize access, security, and continuity, while working to diminish technological and ethical pitfalls that accompany unproctored online exams.
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