ACC
7440
Quizzes and Surveys
- Online quizzes--which are taken online and completed prior to
the
deadline
for credit--are assigned in the Schedule of Assignments. Each
quiz
(except the Baseline Quiz* at the beginning of the course) is based on
the
lecture notes from the prior units, and the assigned readings for that
unit and prior units.
- Note: Everything on this page applies to all Examinations
(Part One and Part Two), as well as to all Quizzes. Before taking a
midterm exam or the final exam, carefully re-read everything on this
page of the syllabus, along with the Exams page of the syllabus.
- Using Blackboard.
Students
who register for this course are automatically enrolled into the online
Blackboard section for this course. For information about Blackboard,
carefully review the information and links available at both of the
following two sites:
- Login to Blackboard using your AccessID. To access Quizzes
(within Course
Documents) and other restricted pages on the Blackboard site for your section of this
course, you'll need to be signed onto Blackboard with your Wayne State
University AccessID
- For new Wayne State students, it's very important that you
immediately log in to WSU Pipeline (http://pipeline.wayne.edu)
and activate your AccessID
account. AccessID
accounts need to be activated before they can be used. Your AccessID format is two letters
followed by four numbers, e.g. xy6789.
The AccessID is printed on
your OneCard. Your initial password for your AccessID account is set to the
9-digit Student ID number, which is also printed on your OneCard.
Note: the only way for you to receive
credit
for the quiz is to complete the quiz online on Blackboard, on time
(that
is, prior to exact date and time deadline set forth in the syllabus).
- Before taking an exam, carefully read the Blackboard Student
Assessment Guide.
- When Quizzes are Made Available. Except for the
Baseline Quiz,
all quizzes are to be completed toward the end of the
student's
study efforts for that unit. Therefore, each regular
quiz is generally not made available on Blackboard until approximately
20 hours (and a minimum of 12 hours) prior to the time and date for
which
that quiz is due. This allows
the student to follow the study recommendations for this course (see
the How
to
Study page of the syllabus) in proper
order. However, to reduce the risk of being locked out and ending up
with a zero, do not wait until the last minute to take a quiz or exam.
As you carefully read the rest of this page you'll see why.
- Quizzes
are Browser-Sensitive. For best results, make sure your
browser allows cookies, and that popup windows are not suppressed or
blocked. It also helps to clear the history cache of your browser
before starting a quiz. In general, firewall and security
settings on your browser should be low so as to allow Blackboard to
interact with your browser.
- Users of the most recent version of the Firefox browser tend to fare
better than users of Internet Explorer or other browsers.
- Quizzes
are Windows-Sensitive.
Never attempt to take a quiz from an unstable connection, because if
you lose your connection during the quiz you will be locked out and
lose all credit for the quiz (quizzes may not be taken more than once
on the Blackboard system). Also, do not have other software or
windows open on your computer when you are ready to take a Quiz.
If you attempt to multi-task during a quiz, you run the risk of being
locked out of the quiz. If you are locked out, you will likely
receive zero credit for that quiz.
- Don't
"Save" your answers as you go. This is just asking for
trouble. Instead, proceed to complete the quiz with deliberation
and quickness and submit it.
- Move along as you complete your quiz. The longer you take
doing a quiz or survey, the more likely you will trigger a lockout and
lose all of your work (see below).
- Windows XP users and Windows 7 users tend to fare better than
Windows Vista users.
- Taking a Quiz. Each quiz is
taken
online,
and is found in the "Quizzes" folder in the Course Documents area of
Blackboard..
Quizzes may be accessed until the due date and time (after which they
disappear).
If you have trouble getting into a quiz, try browsing to WSU Blackboard
page at http://blackboard.wayne.edu/
and then re-enter the course page from that site. This procedure
(which results in the "yellow field" above the Blackboard pages) often
helps. See "If You Want a Copy of Your Quiz,"
below, if you want a copy of your quiz, because copies of quizzes are
otherwise
not made available to you. You need to make your own copy if you
want to have a copy of the quiz itself.
- Quizzes are Timed on Blackboard. The Quizzes are
not meant as "look-up
exercises," and are timed. If you have been studying (see the
"How to Study" page of the syllabus), you will only need ten to twnty
minutes to complete a quiz. However, you will usually have a
half
hour to an hour to complete each quiz. You must take the entire
quiz
in one sitting within the time allotted for that quiz in order to
receive
credit. Therefore, plan to complete all the assigned readings
prior to taking the quiz, as suggested at the How to Study page of the
syllabus. It is
also recommended that
you use a
reliable Internet connection; if you do not have access to a
reliable
Internet connection, consider taking the quiz on a campus computer or
library
computer. Warning: if you run over the time allotted for
the
quiz, even by one second, you will not receive credit for that quiz. If
you start to take a quiz and and take one second longer than the
allotted
time prior to hitting the
button, you will receive a green exclamation mark
(or possibly a red question mark ?
or a padlock
symbol) instead of a grade (or, you will see that a grade has not been
entered). When this happens, the exclamation mark or other
symbol
will eventually be removed, but will be replaced by a zero. When
you trigger a lockout like this, none of your work is saved; it is
"zeroed out," and your only option is to request a reset (see below).
In any event, do not attempt to email any of your quiz or exam work,
since this will result in penalty points (negative points) being
assessed.
- If you Want a Copy of Your Quiz.
Copies
of quizzes are not made available to you. If you want a
copy
of your quiz, you must, prior to hitting
the
button, do the following:
- Be using an updated browser, while taking your quiz.
- Print a copy of the quiz while you are taking the quiz, but
BEFORE you
hit the
button.
- Before you hit the
button,
review your printout (printed copy of the quiz). You might need
to
make a notation of your answers on the printed copy itself.
- If the above procedure was not successful, copy the quiz page
into your
computer "clipboard" before you hit the
button, and then past the information into Notepad, Word Pad, or your
word
processor, in another window on your computer. Again, you might
need
to make a notation of your answers before you hit the
button.
- If you do not make a copy of your quiz before you hit
the
button, you will not be able to go back and obtain a copy. If you
continue to have problems, for future quizzes you might wish to take
these
instructions into a campus computer lab and request help (or ask a
fellow
student).
- Multiple Choice/True False Quizzes are Automatically
Graded. You will
receive
your point
score on each quiz as soon as it is completed, if you properly complete
the quiz within the allotted time before the deadline. Your
points
on each quiz count toward the total Points for purposes of your final
grade.
See the Task
Points page of the syllabus for more information.
- Answers for
Quizzes are made
available
within a day or two prior to each exam.
- However, Quizzes are not comprehensive; they are merely a
very small sampling of the body of knowledge you are learning as you go
along. Therefore, "studying" the quizzes will not be helpful in
preparing for exams. In fact, since quiz questions are never repeated
on exams, studying the quizzes can take time away from "real" and
helpful study, and can actually be counterproductive.
Instead, for suggestions about "real" and helpful study methods, work
from the "How to
Study" page of the syllabus when preparing for exams.
- Check to Make Sure your Work
has been Submitted.
If you have started to take a multiple choice/true-false quiz and have
run into a problem or
interruption prior to hitting the
button, you might see a padlock
or pad
"In Progess"
symbol instead of a grade when you
attempt to View your Grades in the
Tools section of Blackboard. Or, after you think you have properly
submitted your Quiz, you might see a notation such as "Attempt In
Progress" when you attempt to View your Grades in the
Tools section of Blackboard. In either case -- unless you are able to
have your quiz
reset -- you will end
up receiving zero credit for that quiz, because a padlock symbol
is an indication that none of your work was received on Blackboard.
- After the deadline for a quiz, any remainng padlocks are
eventually removed and replaced by a zero. Occasionally, a
padlock remaining
after the deadline for a quiz is manually converted to a score of 1
even though Blackboard automatically records a score of zero. If
you
see a 1 as a score for a quiz, let this serve as a reminder to check to
make sure your work has been submitted, well ahead of any quiz
deadline, so
that you can request a reset well ahead of the quiz deadline (see
below). The best solution, of course, is to re-read this entire
page
of the syllabus from top to bottom, in order to reduce the risk of
triggering a padlock on future quizzes.
- If you run over your time limit prior to hitting the
button, you might instead receive a green exclamation mark
(or possibly a red question mark ?)
instead of a grade. You will end
up receiving zero credit for that quiz if this happens, because Prof.
Spalding will not reset a quiz that was submitted after the time
expired. If you
are interested, green exclamation mark
(or the red question mark ?
) to see the error message.
- Note: An exclamation mark may also appear after you
take an
essay exam. If you click on it, you'll see that the exam needs
grading. Essay exams are manually graded within a week or so of
the
submission deadline. Do not email Prof. Spalding about essay exam green
exclamation mark
,
since this simply means that the exam will be graded within the next
week or two.
- Requesting a Reset or
Exam. If
you start to take a
quiz or exam and
you do run into a problem or interruption prior to hitting the
button, and you seea padlock
or pad
"In Progess"
symbol instead of a grade (or, in the case of an essay exam you see a
ad
"In Progess" instead of a
green exclamation mark
)
when you attempt to View your
Grades in the
Tools section of Blackboard, you have locked yourself out and have
zeroed out your work. There is a small
chance that you can ask Prof. Spalding to reset
your quiz or exam (and even then, usually no more
than
once per semester). If the deadline for the quiz or exam has not
already expired, email Prof.
Spalding
right away (following
the email protocols for this course), asking him to reset your
quiz, so that:
- (1) IF you email Prof. Spalding plenty of time prior to the
deadline for the quiz; and
- (2) IF Prof. Spalding happens to receive and read your
request (be specific: "Please reset my _________" (quiz, multiple
choice exam, essay exam, survey, etc.) in
plenty of time prior to the due date and time for the quiz. Do not ask
to go back to complete your quiz; nothing has been saved when you are
locked out, so there is nothing to go back to you. You can only start
over; and
- (3) IF you have not already established a habit or pattern
of asking for your quiz or exam to be reset, then Prof. Spalding may,
in
response to your email request, agree at his discretion to "clear" your
failed attempt to take
the
quiz. (Note, if the error message is simply that you took too
long
to complete and submit the quiz, your quiz will not be reset.
Instead,
a score of zero will eventually be assigned on the Blackboard
system.)
And, then,
- (4) IF you still have time prior to the quiz deadline, and
if Prof. Spalding has agreed to reset it (#1 through #3 above), the
zero triggered by your lockout will be manually removed by Prof.
Spalding and you
will then be able re-take
it the quiz or other assessment "from scratch" and hopefully earn more
than the zero that
would otherwise have been earned. However, the deadline will not have
been extended, so you will still need to complete your work by the
original deadline.
- No guarantees, of course, so the earlier you take each
quiz, the more
likely
you will be able to complete it on time. If you wait until two or
three hours prior to the deadeline to take your quiz, you will have
assumed the
risk of not leaving Prof. Spalding sufficient time to receive and act
on
your request in time for you to re-take your quiz, and you will
therefore
not receive credit for your quiz.
- If you are unsuccessful in having your quiz reset in time
for you to re-take it for any reason, consider that you have
invested some of
your "slack" points into that quiz. But in the future, find
your way to a more reliable computer and Internet connection (such as a
campus lab or library computer), and be sure to re-read this page
regarding clearing your cache and cookies, multi-tasking, and the
opening of too many windows.
- Never attempt to email quiz answers, exam answers or any
other other
online
work to Prof. Spalding. Work done on Blackboard is not accepted
in hard copy, by email, or in any other format or media.
Noncompliance with these instructions (by attempting to email work to
Prof. Spalding) will result in negative penalty points, not positive
points. (A zero is at least better than negative points!)
If you are unable to retake a quiz after being locked out, chalk it off
to slack points and press on.
- If you trigger a lockout and need to have your quiz reset,
you must actually request a reset in accordance with the very specific
instructions, above. Out of respect for students, quizzes are
never reset without an email request as set forth above. In your email,
don't bother blaming Blackboard, or "the Internet," or some other
outside force (after all, 99% of all lockouts are actually due to a
poor connection, the use of an older computer or a computer that is not
properly designed or set up for highly efficient, high-speed Internet
use, or a disregard for the recommendations set forth above).
Instead, simply assume responsibility for the situation and ask to have
your quiz or other assessment reset as instructed above.
- 95 percent
of
all Quiz problems pertain to the student's computer and connection.
Never assume that the problem is with Blackboard, the Wayne State
computer system, or the quiz itself. If you experience any
problems with a Quiz, your best and most reliable solution is to find
your way to a better computer and connection. And remember to make sure
your
browser allows cookies, and that popup windows are not suppressed or
blocked. It also helps to clear the history cache of your browser
before starting a quiz. Of course, it is
also important that you follow all of the other recommendations on this
page as
well. But if you are in the habit of always assuming that
computer-related problems are the fault of "the network" or some
external technical glitch, try to break that habit in this
course. Start your troubleshooting by moving to a better computer
and connection. If you are using a dial-up connection, move to a high
speed Internet connection. If you are using wireless access, move
to an Ethernet or hard-wired access. If you are using a laptop,
move to a desktop. Etc. Campus computers (in the libraries and
campus computer labs) are among the more reliable connections.
- Reviewing your Quiz Results. After
completing a quiz, it is a good idea to View your Grades at the
Tools section of Blackboard to make sure you did not trigger a lockout
(see above). When you do, you might notice "class average" scores
on
Blackboard. Those averages are automatically calculated by the
Blackboard system, and have absolutely nothing to do with your grade or
your relative standing
in class (the Blackboard averages often include scores of zero for
students who have
dropped the class, or other irrelevant or confounding data). This
course is not graded on a curve, and your Points are calculated in the
manner described in the Syllabus. Just ignore the class average
statistics shown on Blackboard. They mean nothing.
- Disappointed in your
performance on a Quiz?
Remember that you do not need to score an "A" on your quizzes (and are
not expected to), in order to be able to earn an "A" in this course.
Students who
do not earn high scores on quizzes, are often able to offset those
lower quiz scores by earning 100 percent of the available points on
homework, surveys, class participation, email assignments, and other
tasks where thoughtfulness, timeliness, good grammar, and carefully
following the instructions, contribute more to the earned points than
the technical correctness of the work.
- Surveys. Surveys, which
are
not graded,
are assigned in addition to quizzes, which are graded. Five
points
are earned for surveys completed with "minimal"--but
complete--answers. Survey answers are compiled anonymously
and,
unlike a student's Discussion Board entries (which are always available
to all other students), the identity of the provider of specific survey
answers is never revealed to other students. A summary of the
student
group's answers may be revealed, and specific answers (such as short
essays)
may be revealed to the rest of the student group (i.e., to others
enrolled
in the course) without any name being associated with such answers (so
do not include self-identifying information in any written answer to a
Survey question).
- Surveys are generally made available within 24 hours prior
to
the due date, in the same manner as quizzes.
- Note: Survey scores, like essay exam scores, are posted
within a
week or so after the due date. Until those scores are posted,
students
will likely see a zero as their score in the My Grades area of the
Tools section on Blackboard. The zero will be converted to a score
within a week or two, if the student made a good faith effort to
complete the survey with thoughtful answers.
- Exams. Multiple choice, true/false, and
similar
questions
on exams are taken in the same manner as quizzes, and are also found in
the in the Course Documents area of Blackboard.
- See Also: How
to
Study page of the syllabus.
- Academic Integrity. Strict
compliance with the Wayne State
University Academic Integrity policies and the Student Code of
Conduct are required in this
course. Any cheating, fabrication, plagiarism, or other academic
dishonesty will result in an automatic grade of E for this entire
course, irrespective of the specific context or assessment involved
(quiz, homework, exam, etc.). In addition, charges will be filed with the
Judicial Officer of the Dean of Students Office. For more
information, see the Student
Code of Conduct brochure. There is
zero tolerance of academic dishonesty in this course.
*For more information about the
Baseline Quiz, see
the Task Points
page of the syllabus.
Last Revised 01/06/2010
Copyright 2002 and 2010: Albert D. Spalding,
Jr.