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Teaching Tips

Below are sample teaching tips that can be sent out to instructors throughout the term, semester or year. These brief teaching tips work great as parts of newsletters, general emails, status updates, and tweets.

These are just ideas and the numbers are arbitrary, so the Trainer/Administrator can choose, add to, edit, and adapt these tips to their individual campus’ needs.


Teaching Tip: Master Class

In order to manage the assignments for multiple sections of the same course, convert your class or create a class as a Master Class. The Master Class allows you to create assignments once and push those assignments and due dates to the various sections.


 

Teaching Tip: Double-blind Peer Reviews

In PeerMark you can have double blind review if you ask students to not put their names on their assignments. Instructors will still know whose assignment is whose, but the students performing PeerMark peer review will not.



Teaching Tip: Reflection Assignments

You can have students do Reflection Assignments for each round of feedback they receive from Turnitin. For example, once students receive their Originality Report, they can reflect on what changes need to be made and why; students can reflect on their peer feedback following a PeerMark peer review to demonstrate what improvements they plan to make; and students can reflect upon their grade, rubric performance, etc. once the instructor provides evaluative feedback on the final draft of the assignment.


Teaching Tip: GradeMark Statistics

Did you know that you can review graphs of student performance on assignment, rubrics and QuickMark comments throughout the course of the semester? Simply click on the students paper through GradeMark and select “Tools” and “Statistics.” This information is also available through the “graphs” selection within the course grade book.


Teaching Tip: Discussions

A course discussion board comes with any Turnitin account, so instructors can get the benefit of asynchronous discussion of course material. Instructors might, for example, ask students to discuss course content, respond to a given reading assignment, or post assignment topics for class discussion.


Teaching Tip: Resubmissions

In order to help students self-assess their ability to integrate sources, instructors can allow them to view their Turnitin Originality Report and make changes up to the due date. It does, however, take 24 hours for each new report. In order to allow for multiple submissions when creating an assignment, click on “more options” and under “Generate Originality Reports for student submissions,” select “immediately: can overwrite reports until due date.”


Teaching Tip: Revision Assignments

Revision is a key element to writing well. Students need exposure to the revision concept, and instructors can do this by evaluating and scoring papers through GradeMark and ask students to submit a revision assignment. To create a revision assignment simply “Create New Assignment” and select Revision Assignment.


Teaching Tip: Collaborative Assessment

Engaging students in peer review on course assignments can enhance their collaborative and critical thinking skills, both of which are important to learning and communicating in the 21st century. Instructors of all disciplines can set up peer review sessions through PeerMark and allow the work to happen all online. Students get the benefit of the collaborative assessment, and instructors have the ease of set up and paper distribution through PeerMark. Students might even perform multiple rounds of feedback for one assignment, evaluating different assessment criteria each time.


Teaching Tip: Course Statistics

From the instructor’s Turnitin homepage, he or she can access statistics that provide valuable assessment data. The statistics icon to the right of the course name details the number of papers with certain percentages of similarity and by selecting “QuickMark breakdown,” instructors can identify the frequency of errors for a given class to help the instructor determine new teaching opportunities.



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Administrator Training

Continued Training

The initial training sessions were focused on getting instructors started with Turnitin, covering some of the basic functionality. Offering continued training focused on specific Turnitin products, features or outcomes is essential in maximizing the effectiveness and efficiency needed to truly save instructors time and engage students.

Below are some topical ideas and announcements for different types of training sessions you can do throughout the year. If you're not up for conducting your own continued training, Turnitin periodically offers several live training webinars which are also available on-demand as recordings.


Basic Training

Need help remembering how to create Turnitin assignments in your course? Want to review OriginalityCheck and its features? Forgot how to log in and access your course?

Come to the Turnitin Basic Training session on [date and time] in [location] to review some of the basics of using Turnitin in your classes.


Intermediate Training

Are you comfortable with creating classes and assignments in Turnitin? Ready to learn more about how to manage students, assignments and your course? Want to learn how to set up Master Classes, pull assignments from your assignment Library?

Come learn some of the “tricks of the trade” in the Turnitin Intermediate Training session being held on [date and time] in [location].


Advanced Training

Ready to go completely paperless with your written assignments? Want to become a power user of Turnitin to enhance student engagement and facilitate feedback?

Come to the Turnitin Advanced Training session to more efficiently manage written assignments in your courses. We’ll see you on [date and time] in [location] to free you from lugging piles of papers around and storing papers in your office.


Managing Students and Coursework with Turnitin

Discussion Boards, Student Email, Assignment Libraries, Course Calendar, etc. are all available to you through Turnitin.

To learn how to use these features to make managing students and coursework easier in your classes, meet us on [date and time] in [location].


Beyond Record Keeping: Using the Turnitin Grade Book

Have you ever inserted the wrong grade for a student? Find out how the Turnitin grade book prevents these errors and makes record keeping easier. But the grade book does so much more.

To learn how to go beyond record keeping using the Turnitin grade book, attend our up-coming training at [date and time] in [location].


Creating Rubrics in GradeMark

Spending too much time grading assignments? Rubrics offer instructors faster evaluation of student assignments and provide more valuable assessment feedback to students on their assignments.

GradeMark rubrics allow you to score assignments as you grade, streamlining feedback procedures for the instructor. Our upcoming training, “Creating Rubrics in GradeMark,” will teach you how to create rubrics and share them among your colleagues on [date and time] in [location].


Beyond Grading Papers: Using GradeMark Assessment Features

“How am I doing in this class?” Instructors can provide an answer using numerical or letter grades, and show students how they are doing in the class using data and graphs that go beyond a point value or percentage.

Learn how to go beyond grading papers in the “Using GradeMark Assessment Features Training” on [date and time] in [location].



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Administrator Training

Attend Webinars

Turnitin offers live and recorded professional development webinars geared toward taking instructors beyond just plagiarism prevention and toward a powerful pedagogy for writing to learn—this webinar series is called Turnitin Academy Live. Developed and taught by a college professor and Turnitin power user, each one-hour session explores practical elements of using Turnitin in the instructional process.

Below are links recent recordings of our more popular webinar. To view a schedue of upcoming and additional webinar topics available on-demand, visit the Turnitin Academy Live page.


Pushing Past Plagiarism with OriginalityCheck

Ready to take your use of OriginalityCheck to the next level? Learn to use some advanced features of Turnitin like discussion boards, reflection assignments, and revision assignments, to improve writing skills and encourage original work. Click to Watch »


Peer Review Across the Curriculum with PeerMark

Want to conduct student peer reviews effectively and efficiently? Learn how to use PeerMark to distribute papers to review, collect useful reviewer feedback, encourage student participation, and achieve cognitive benefits of peer review. Click to Watch »


Offering Meaningful Feedback with GradeMark

Tired of lugging stacks of papers all over town and scribbling illegible feedback in the margins for hours on end? Learn how to use GradeMark to provide more meaningful feedback in less time and track class progress and problem areas. Click to Watch »



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Administrator Training

Encourage Sharing

Sharing your school's success stories, results, best practices, and testimonials about Turnitin creates social proof of Turnitin's efficacy, which in turn drives more instructors to try it, use it, and adopt it. What your school or instructors use for sharing isn't important—whether it's a blog, newsletters, groups, list-serves, Twitter, Yammer, or others.

The key is to foster sharing within your institution as well as outside your institution. There are incredible insights you can find on individual and institutional webpages, blogs and social media sites that share success stories, how-to's, best practices, and other teaching tips.

Turnitin curates some of this and we share it through several of our communication and community channels:

Social Media and Sharing

Email Newsletters

  • Turnitin Academy newsletter which focuses on training resources.
  • Turnitin Re:marks newsletter which focuses on relevant news and Turnitin features.


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