Since September, Simmons Technology has been working with a small group of faculty members to test a new product called Tegrity for capturing and sharing lectures, presentations, and other in-class activities. We want to provide an update on how faculty have been using Tegrity and some of the opportunities it might create in the future.
School of Management professor Jill Avery was able to leverage Tegrity to help a number of students who missed one of her classes in order to attend a conference. Professor Avery reached out to Technology for a way to record the content of her course and make it available to students online. Technology was able to work with her to add Tegrity to her course, record course content, upload it to Moodle, and make it available to students within Moodle.
Michael Jordan, professor in the department of Chemistry & Physics, has also been recording all of his lectures in PHYS 103 and making the videos available in Moodle for his students as an optional way to review content. In addition, Professor Jordan is giving students the opportunity to record their own videos and upload them to Moodle. He has also edited course content using external tools on his computer and uploaded them back into Tegrity for student access.
These are just a couple of examples of how faculty are using Tegrity in their classes. If you are a faculty member who’s interested in using Tegrity during the Spring semester, please email [email protected] for more information.