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Note as of 6 p.m. on Wednesday, February 8th: Because of difficulties that students have had with Microsoft Producer, I've simplified this assignment significantly. If you haven't read the revised instructions, please read the revised instructions below.Recording reviews of other web areasFor this peer review assignment, you will look at and comment on websites created by three other students. This will require you to use judgment and diplomacy to organize helpful thoughts and suggestions for your fellow students. This assignment requires more creative thought and insight than other assignments this term. Most professional careers rely on giving and receiving advice to your peers. Please treat this assignment as a real job-like task. You will organize your conclusions and recommendations in two ways. First, you will modify a set of Microsoft PowerPoint slides to contain written ideas and numerical scores for each of the three websites. Watching a video or listening to the radio often has more impact than reading the written word. Since computers now make it easy to record speech and videos, we want you to gain experience recording video files. So for the second part of the peer review process, you will use Microsoft Producer to record three videos -- one video of each website that you are to review. Step 1: Modify a PowerPoint set of slidesBefore you begin to use Microsoft PowerPoint, you may want to look at the sample set of PowerPoint slides Dr. Sullivan created. Find out which three student websites you should review by looking at your row in the table labeled "Who You Review" in the Student Pages -- Peer Review listing. Note that this page has two 200-row tables, and the "Who You Review" table is near the bottom of the page. Look at these websites. Decide what you like about them and what should be improved. Take notes about your ideas. Then, complete this step-by-step list of instructions for preparing the PowerPoint slides:
Step 2: Recording three video clipsMicrosoft Producer is an add-in that supplements PowerPoint. We won't be using much of this program's capabilities this term -- we will use it only to record three WMV, Window Media Video, files from the screen.
What should you do if one of the websites that you are to review doesn't exist? First, look directly at drive V to see if the student might have built a website in the wrong location. For example, did the student build a folder named websight or website2 rather than one named website? Or did the student rename the index.htm file to be home.htm -- this will keep the links on the Student Pages portion of the class website from finding the student's home page. Then, regardless of what you find, record an appropriate videoclip giving the student feedback about where they stand with respect to their project. To do this, you would record a short videoclip about the "Page Not Found" error. Step 3 -- Publish your work in the proper locationIf you completed the previous steps correctly, you should have four files in P:\classwork\ba271\PeerReview:
Take the entire PeerReview folder and copy it to your folder inside drive V. Another way of saying this is to copy the PeerReview folder and the four files inside it so they exist in your \\cob-storage\studentwebdata\UserID\PeerReview folder, where UserID is replaced with the UserID that you use to log on to the College of Business network. To test that your PowerPoint slides and video clips are in the proper location for grading, go to the "Who You Review" table in the bottom half of the Student Pages -- Peer Review listing. Click on your PowerPoint slides link. This should open your PowerPoint slides. If they do not open, recheck your work and fix the problem. Also click on the links for your video files. Once again, if they do not open, recheck your work and fix the problem. Step 4 -- Revising your web area based on the reviewsAfter you receive your reviews, consider them carefully and revise your website accordingly. Learning to accept and respond appropriately to an independent outside review is an important -- but difficult -- skill to master. Do your best. |
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Dave Sullivan. |