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Olivia, the organized student
Olivia is super organized. After the first day of classes, she goes and enters every pset, test and project milestone into her Google calendar. This not only helps her remember assignments in the future, but gives her a nice overview of everything she had to do during the semester and when she will have crunch weeks. The data entry takes her ~30 minutes, and she often gets frustrated at Google calendar for mis-interpreting MIT class numbers as times. She used calendars collaboratively for one project class a few years ago, but her group just used the calendars for events and left the task organization to email and in-person conversations.
She would use a collaborative scheduling tool, but wouldn't want anyone else to edit her information (she's fine with subscription).
Lessons learned from Olivia:
Levi, the lazy student
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Tina, the TA
Tina has been a TA for two years, and she currently uses a number of websites and online tools to communicate with her students. She is not satisfied with the current way of entering this information, which sometimes involves editing HTML files on her computer and uploading them using FTP. As a student, she uses Google Calendar to organize her assignments. At the beginning of a term, she schedules all her test dates in a personal calendar. As a TA, one of her concerns is getting the word out when a change is made to an assignment. Tina believes that a collaborative organizer would benefit her more as a student than as a TA, but she also thinks that such tool should support the specific needs of TAs and instructors. She is particularly interested in collecting assignments statistics, such as difficulty and time to completion. She believes the collaborative nature of the tool would not make it less reliable, especially if moderated by the TAs.
Lessons learned from TA:
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Creating a Class Feed
Subscribing to a Class Feed
Creating an Assignment
Marking an Assignment as Completed