Graduate School, USDA (GS) EDIT3360-C
Speeding up the process
We provide options for folks who want to complete the course quickly. However, the instructors and Graduate School staff have serious concerns about people rushing through at the expense of usefully applying information they're reading and retaining what they're learning. If you plan to move quickly through your studies, please be aware of our concerns and weigh how important it is for you to rush through.
Below are some options for speeding things up.
Sending more than one lesson at a time:
- You can send more than one lesson at a time. Answers to some lessons will affect future lessons and you may miss a few points on later lessons if you do this, but some students don't mind the trade-off. My only caution when doing this is to remember to wait to see feedback on each index-preparation lesson before sending the next index-preparation lesson. That is, wait to send Lesson 6 until you receive your graded Lesson 5 back. Likewise, you should wait to send Lesson 8 until you receive your graded Lesson 6 back. And (I bet you see this coming) wait to send Lesson 11 until you receive your graded lesson 8 back.
- Be sure to use correct postage when you send bundles of lessons.
Sending lessons through email
- I can accept lessons through email. If you'd like to do this, please follow these guidelines.
- Remember to include the Student Response Sheet info: your mailing address, the time it took to complete the lesson, the version of the course that you've got. To find the Version number, look on the first page of your course guide (just under the course code). This version number should also show up on the Student Response Sheets in the same box as the Lesson #.
Receiving graded info through email
- If you want grade info through email, please make this request on each Student Response Sheet that you send to me.
- For index-prep lessons, I can email scanned images of my handwritten notes. If you want this to happen, please make this request on each Student Response Sheet that you send to me.
- For all other lessons, I can email PDF copies of answer keys. If you want this to happen, please make this request on each Student Response Sheet that you send to me. I can't list items that have been answered incorrectly because it is too time-intensive. You have to wait to see hard copies of your lesson for that info.
Sending your lessons through postal mail:
Other tips:
- Holidays are great times to get ahead! Most students take breaks from their Graduate School course during holidays. That means I get a break around that time, too. However, holidays are then followed by a huge surge of Graduate School lessons. What does that mean for you? Sending your lessons before and during the holidays ensures the usual quick turnaround. Sending lessons immediately after the holidays means you'll likely see longer turnaround times.
- Dawn Spencer has written a great article called Over 80 Productive Things to Do... while you are waiting for your lessons to be returned.
Special treatment (better known as "for me, can't you just...")
- I can't accept lessons submitted by fax. This is both a logistical issue and an investment issue. Logistically, we'd have to arrange a time convenient for you and when I would be in my office with my fax set to answer incoming calls. Based on the volume of requests sent to me for submission by fax, I'd probably invest quite a bit of time, energy, paper, and ink printing students' lessons. I'm sure you can understand why it's a donation I'm not prepared to make.
- I can't single out students for whom I alter the above process. On this web page are several options for speeding up the process. As you see, it is up to each individual student to figure out where this course falls on their own priority lists. Is it worth investing in Overnight mail? Is it worth the time to send multiple lessons in bundles? I have EDIT3360-C on my priority as one entity, not in different spots according to different students' needs for speed. Singling one student's lessons out of dozens that pass through my hands each month takes too much effort, too much time out of my allotted Graduate School time (for grading, responding to e-mails, and taking calls), too much time away from my other professional activities, and is too unfair to all the other students assigned to me who also want to finish the course quickly. Wouldn't you feel jipped if I decided that another student's needs were more important that yours so I always put their lessons on the top of the pile - grading their lessons before yours? That's what I thought. '-) I don't want anyone to feel that way about this course.
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