This Month on the OpenLab: August 2023 Release

Dog with green life vest jumping in a wave.
Prepare for landing” by Nathan Rupert is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND.

On August 17 we released version 1.7.69 of the OpenLab. It included many new features, as well as updates to all existing themes and plugins, including BuddyPress and WordPress, the two primary plugins that power the OpenLab. 

New features

Choose a Template for your Site!

When you create a new Course, Project, Club, or Portfolio, the site created uses a template that is appropriate for each type of site. For example, new Course sites come with pre-created pages for Syllabus, Assignments, etc. Now, instead of one template for each type of site, there can be multiple templates for different types of Course, Project, Club, or Portfolio Sites. For example, there are two templates for Course sites: Interactive, intended for use with active student posting and commenting, and Informational, for sites containing course materials, with instructor posts. You can choose the type of site template you want to use when you’re creating your new Site. Templates for Projects, Clubs, and Portfolios are coming soon! Learn more in OpenLab Help.

Collaboration Tools

When you create a new Course, Project, or Club, you now have the choice to activate the collaboration tools that appear on the Profile of your group: Discussion, Docs, File Library, and Announcements. Announcements is enabled by default, but you can enable or disable any of the tools during creation, or at any time in Profile > Settings.

Collaboration tools in Group Creation and Settings.

Add to Portfolio

If you have an OpenLab Portfolio, you can turn on an ‘Add to My Portfolio’ button that makes it easier to add work from Courses, Projects, or Clubs to your Portfolio. This Add to Portfolio feature has been around for a while, but many OpenLab members aren’t aware of it. To make it more visible, we’ve added a checkbox to enable or disable it in the first step of Portfolio creation. It can still be found in Portfolio Profile > Settings, where you can enable or disable it at any time.

Option to hide OpenLab Toolbar on Sites

Currently, there’s an OpenLab toolbar that appears at the top of your Course, Project, Club, or Portfolio site. If you would like to hide that toolbar for site visitors who are not logged in (for example, potential employers who are viewing your ePortfolio), there’s now a checkbox where you can do that in Profile > Settings. Logged in OpenLab members will always see the toolbar, as it provides important links to the Dashboard (for site members) or back to other parts of the OpenLab. 

Checkbox to Show WordPress admin bar to non-logged-in visitors

Activity Widget & Block

In the January 2023 release, we introduced the Activity page, which appears on every Course, Project, and Club Profile. It includes all activity and can be filtered by type (posts, comments, docs, etc). After feedback from OpenLab members, we created a version of this activity feed that can be included on a Course, Project, or Club Site. This can be done by adding the OpenLab Activity block to a post or page, or the OpenLab Activity widget to the sidebar or footer of your site. Learn more in OpenLab Help.

Non-active Status for Courses, Projects, Clubs, and Portfolios

This new feature allows admins of a Course, Project, Club, or Portfolio to switch it to ‘Not Active’ status if it’s no longer being actively used. This status change means that new members are not able to join or request membership, unless invited by an admin. A notice will be added to the profile and it will display on the last page of My OpenLab > My Courses, Projects, or Clubs. Faculty may wish to set past courses to ‘Not Active’; that way course materials can remain open and available to the community but students won’t be able to join a past course by mistake. Learn more in OpenLab Help.

OpenLab Connections

OpenLab Connections is a new feature that allows you to link related Courses, Projects, or Clubs and share information between them. For instance, members of one course section can follow activity from a connected section without needing to become members of that section (private content will not be shared). Learn more in OpenLab Help.

Membership Privacy in a Course, Project, or Club

This feature allows OpenLab members to hide their membership in a particular Course, Project, or Club, so that it doesn’t appear to others on their profile, and their activity doesn’t appear in activity feeds around the OpenLab. For example, perhaps you joined a Beanie Babies Collectors club, but don’t necessarily want to advertise your love of Beanie Babies to anyone who views your profile. You could switch your membership to private, and no one would see the membership on your OpenLab Profile.

Rich text formatting options for Discussion

We added rich text formatting for Discussion forum posts and replies. This makes it easier to add images and other text formatting to Discussion.

Improvements to image embedding in Site comments

After gathering more information about how people are using media embedding in comments (introduced in the January 2023 release), we made some improvements to this feature to make it clear when images embed properly. When you click on the image embed icon in the comment editor, and paste in the URL for an image, instead of seeing the URL, you’ll now see the image embedded in the comment editor itself. If embedding isn’t supported for the image you’re using, you will just see the URL appear in the comment editor. 

Image embed icon
Using the image embed icon
Image embedded in comment editor
Image is embedded in comment editor

You can now also embed images from the Site’s Media Library and the Files Library on the Profile. Just click the image embed icon and paste the URL for images saved in either of these places. 

Member Profile and My OpenLab improvements

We changed the interface for adding social links to your profile, and updated the list of platforms. We also added Display Name to the top of the profile to make it more prominent. As a reminder, Display Name is the name that you choose to use on the OpenLab. You don’t have to use your real name, unless you want to! (Learn more about privacy on the OpenLab.)

We cleaned up the design of the page in My OpenLab where you can invite new members to the OpenLab (My Invitations > Invite New Members). Now instead of seeing a long list of your Courses, Projects, and Clubs that you can invite the new member to, you can search for them instead.

Embedding for Padlet, Geogebra, and Desmos

After a number of requests for Padlet embedding, we’re happy to have been able to add it in this release. You can find instructions in OpenLab Help.

We’ve made some improvements to the appearance of Geogebra and Desmos embeds in a page or post. 

OpenLab Calendar

In preparation for better integration of City Tech campus-wide calendars, we removed the OpenLab Calendar that used to appear in the About section of the site. Soon we’ll be adding a feed for the campus-wide news, events, and alerts so it’s easier to find the information you need in one place. And there is still a calendar included on the Profile of all Courses, Projects, and Clubs.

Plugins

We added six new plugins, and made improvements to the two OpenLab grading plugins. 

New plugins

Broken Link Checker is the new and improved version of WP Broken Link Status Checker. You can use it to scan for and alert you to broken links on your site.

Editoria11y Accessibility Checker, developed and maintained by Princeton University’s Web Development Services team, checks your posts and pages for accessibility issues, and displays any existing issues with a thorough description of what they are and how you can address them. It is also helpful as a learning tool, providing easy-to-understand information about making your site more accessible. 

GTranslate allows you to use Google Translate to offer versions of your website in different languages, using Google Translate’s automatic translation service. You can add a widget with a dropdown allowing visitors to choose their language. 

Reckoning is an assessment plugin developed for Blogs@Baruch, and built on by the CUNY Academic Commons, that we’ve brought over to the OpenLab. Made for Course Sites, it allows the instructor to view all member posts and comments in one place. It also incorporates grades from WP Grade Comments, and allows you to export all data to CSV. 

WeBWorK Problem Embed is a new mathematics plugin created as part of City Tech’s “Connect the DOTS” grant that allows faculty to embed WeBWorK math problems on an OpenLab site. Students can interact with the problem directly on the site, rather than having to navigate away to the WeBWorK site.

Improvements

We made a few changes to WP Grade Comments to clarify when a private vs. public comment is being made. Now, whenever a grade is included, the comment is automatically private. In addition, we’ve added a checkbox for private comments for post authors as well as admins to ensure no one accidentally leaves a public reply to a private comment.   

In OpenLab Gradebook, we updated the options for Midterm Grade to incorporate the recent changes in City Tech’s new grading scale.


As always, please contact us with any questions!

Summer Series 2023-Part 5

Sidewalk with finish and start written in chalk.
Start / finish” by Nicholas Nova via Flickr CC BY 2.0

A 5-Part Self-Guided Series To Get Everyone Started on the OpenLab

Part 5 of 5: Planning your Semester, Pt. 2

Now that you’ve worked through Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4 of the OpenLab Summer Series, let’s work through Part 5! In this final installment, we wrap up our summer series with two tasks that will get your course up and running for the start of the semester. These tasks involve setting up your dynamic course content as well as your first few assignments.

Task 1: Customize your Posts

  • Read through the posts that come pre-loaded in new courses. By default, these are published, but you can edit them as needed. 
    • Note the function of these posts. Unlike pages, which you used in Part 4 to publish your syllabus and course policies, posts are used to convey dynamic content, new information that will be updated throughout the semester.
    • Note that these pre-written template posts have different categories. These categories can be accessed from the main navigation menu and can always be edited.
  • Edit each of these posts, adapting them to your course’s needs. You may decide that you don’t need some of the posts, in which case you can delete them, or don’t need them yet, in which case you can switch them to drafts.

Task 2: Design Student Assignments

  • Read the Designing Assignments section in OpenLab help for links to example assignments created by your colleagues.
  • Decide how you will  collect student work. Consider the following:
    • Do you want students to submit work you can read directly on your Course Site, links to work stored elsewhere, or files that you can download onto your computer?
    • Do you want students to be able to see and respond to each other’s work?
    • What kind of feedback do you want to provide and where?
  • Read through the different ways you can receive student work on the OpenLab. Based on your answers to the questions above, select the way(s) you will receive student work on the OpenLab.

You are now well-equipped to start the semester on the OpenLab. The OpenLab Community Team is of course available to help you at any point in your process, so check our Support offerings, read through our Teaching with the OpenLab and OpenLab for Students modules, search through Help, or email the OpenLab Community Team with a question.

In the Spotlight: Pre-semester Prep

close-up of purple allium flower with a bee
Allium and Honey Bee, Greys Court” by s9-4pr via Flickr CC BY 2.0

As you get busy preparing for the upcoming semester, the OpenLab team is here to support your course building efforts!

Join a Workshop

Click here to view the full schedule and register to receive the Zoom link for the workshops.

Monday, 8/21/23

  • Getting Started on the OpenLab (express): 1:00-1:30pm
  • Creating a Course Site: 1:30-2:30pm
  • Fostering an Interactive Course Site 2:30-3:30pm

Thursday, 8/24

  • Getting Started on the OpenLab (express): 10:00-10:30am
  • Creating a Course Site: 10:30-11:30am
  • Fostering an Interactive Course Site 11:30am-12:30pm

Follow the 5-part Summer Series

In each of the five installments of this asynchronous Summer Series, the OpenLab team suggests tasks to guide you from creating an account through joining the community to creating courses. No worries if you didn’t start last month–follow along with the installments at your own pace and at your own start date.

Co-work with us

Last semester, the OpenLab team piloted co-working session for quiet working time with others, with the option to move to a breakout room for conversation or questions. Join OpenLab team members on Friday, 8/18/23 at 12:30-1:30pm to start working on your course site, build out your portfolio, sort through your email, anything OpenLab or not OpenLab, or just to be a positive force for anyone else joining who needs that energy!

Help is here

Use Help materials and screencasts to guide your work. Search for your specific topic in the OpenLab’s Help section or navigate through the different sections. You can also reach out for email support by sending a message to us at OpenLab@CityTech.cuny.edu or via our contact form.

Want more? Request a workshop for your group, ask a question, or let us know what else we can do to support you!

Summer Series 2023-Part 4

Chalk Path” by Alan Levine via Flickr CC0 1.0

A 5-Part Self-Guided Series To Get Everyone Started on the OpenLab

Part 4 of 5: Planning your Semester, Pt. 1

We hope that Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3 of the OpenLab Summer Series have helped you get ready to plan your semester in Part 4!

In this installment, we suggest two tasks to guide faculty in planning for the fall semester. Both tasks help faculty customize their OpenLab course site to communicate with their students. 

Before you begin further customizing your course site, ask yourself:

  • What information do students need from me to be successful this semester?
  • How would I like students to communicate with me this semester?
  • What kind of class dialogue would I like to foster?
Task 1: Explore Student-Instructor Communication
  • Get familiar with the different types of communication your course site can facilitate: Instructors can communicate information through pages, posts, and comments. Students can’t write pages, but can write posts and comments.
    • Pages are for static information, such as the course syllabus, schedule, grading information, and contact information–the kinds of content students will find in the Course Info section of the course site.
    • Posts show up at the top of the site, generate a notification via email to all members of the course, and pop your course to the top of the Courses section on the home page and Courses page on the OpenLab. You can assign categories to posts to organize them into category archives–when you add category archives to your menu, it makes it easy to find content, such as all the Class Agendas (posted by the instructor), or all the work for Project 1 (posted by students and the instructor). A category archive for Discussions creates a suggested space for students to hold class dialogue online. A first assignment is suggested for instructors in which students introduce themselves to each other, and are encouraged to respond to each other’s introductions.
    • Comments can generate dialogue within a site. Depending on the settings you choose, anyone can write a comment (that the instructor can approve or not), which show up below a page or post. Comments can be threaded, creating the opportunity for more discussion among students and the instructor. They can also include links and images. Assignments can be designed to take advantage of the openness of comments–whether by asking students to comment on a post before they even have OpenLab accounts, or by inviting students to comment on work on other sites throughout the OpenLab. Comments can also be useful for feedback and grades on student work. (Note that FERPA protects student record privacy, and student work should not be graded publicly.)
  • Professors can share surveys as posts on the home page to gather information about students in the course, or even to collect student work. These surveys are powered by a plugin called Gravity Forms
Task 2: Customize the Pages on your Course
  • Prepare and gather your course materials for your site, keeping reading ease and accessibility in mind. These materials convey information from you to your students, and include:
    • Your syllabus
    • Your contact information
    • Your grading policy/ grading rubrics
    • Your course schedule.
  • Update the pages on your course site with these materials! 
  • If you have course readings that are available online, decide now how you will link to these readings from your OpenLab site. Please make sure to read our copyright guidelines as you do this.
    • Are your readings freely available online? Can you provide links in your syllabus/ class agendas/ course schedule?
    • Are your readings large PDF files? If so, we recommend using an external hosting service to host these files, such as Dropbox, Office 365 or other hosting service provided by the college. You can provide your students with instructions on how to access this service on your OpenLab site. 
    • Are your materials accessible? Can someone using an assistive device access all of the information on your syllabus and in other course materials? The OpenLab has compiled materials to help you make your work accessible.

In our final installment, we’ll focus on further facilitating communication on your course site and on finishing touches.

Summer Series 2023-Part 3

creatures drawn with color chalk on a paved walkway.
“chalky walky path” by jessica wilson {jek in the box} via Flickr CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

A 5-Part Self-Guided Series To Get Everyone Started on the OpenLab

Part 3 of 5: Create on the OpenLab

As the summer moves on and the semester gets closer, we hope that Part 1 and Part 2 of the OpenLab Summer Series have helped you get started with creating your account, updating your profile, and exploring what you might want to create. Now in Part 3, we take on creating: creating sites, but also to creating communities, collaborations, and dialogue by joining other sites, connecting with friends and colleagues, participating in discussion forums, and more. That said, task 2 below is intended for instructors and focuses on the first steps of course creation, taking a particularly close look at the course template.

  • Task 1: Create Connections:
    • Join our in-house sites to stay connected and updated about what’s happening in the OpenLab community. The Open Road has OpenLab news, information about workshops and other support, and events; Open Pedagogy on the OpenLab is a site for sharing and discussing resources about open digital pedagogy.
    • Browse or search through to join other projects and clubs that relate to your interests. Don’t stop there–look through courses and portfolios as well to get to know who’s doing what. Use the filters to tailor your search.
    • Connect with friends: find other members you know and invite them to connect with you.
    • Learn more about how to create a club, portfolio, or project (or if you’re a faculty member, a course)?
  • Task 2: If you’re a faculty member, create your Fall 2023 course!
    • Look to colleague’s course sites as mentor sites! Find examples of the same course, other coursese in your department, or other courses that seem engaging to you. Working in the open means that colleagues can share ideas, techniques, and design, giving credit where appropriate.
    • Decide if you’re going to create a course or clone a course. You can also take advantage of what we call shared cloning to use someone else’s course as a starting point for yours.
    • Using the filters in the Courses page, check to see if there is a model course for the course you’re teaching. That’s a course developed by colleagues in your department that you can clone and tailor for your instance. Or if there’s a site that seems like it would work well for your course, see if its instructor made it cloneable–then you can work to tailor it instead of starting from the beginning of course creation.
    • Customize your course’s profile for your course community. Choose a privacy setting for the profile an site, add an avatar (if you don’t have an image, find a reusable images online) and a course description, and decide if you’ll want to use the available Discussions, Docs, and the File Library.
    • Customize your course’s site as well. Add a header image, and revise the site’s title and tagline or subtitle–we recommend using your course name as the title, and including instructor’s name, course number, and semester/year in the subtitle. You can edit your site’s widgets. You will want to edit the “About this Course” widget to share your name, office hours, contact information, and a brief paragraph about this Course.

In our 4th installment, we’ll look at facilitating communication between instructors and students–and among students–in courses for Fall 2023.

Summer Series 2023-Part 2

Rainbow Chalk” by Brian Yap via Flickr CC BY-NC 2.0

A 5-Part Self-Guided Series To Get Everyone Started on the OpenLab

Part 2 of 5: Explore the OpenLab and Learn How to Get OpenLab Help

Welcome back–we hope you had an easy time following along with Part 1 last week and now have your account set up, your avatar added, and your profile full of the pieces of information you want to share! Even if you’re not new to the OpenLab, getting your profile in order is useful–you can edit your profile and change your avatar easily.

This week, for Part 2 of the 5-part self-guided series, we explore to learn how others use the OpenLab to learn, teach, build community, and pursue other scholarly, pedagogical, and extra-curricular interests. We’ll also show how to get support for using the OpenLab.

  • Task 1: Browse through the OpenLab to learn more about what you can do and what working in the open means:
    • Check out In the Spotlight, our blog series that features a different exemplary site each week. Begin with the  Spotlight Archive. If you are a student, you may want to scroll through some student ePortfolios and clubs. If you are a faculty member, you may want to scroll through some spotlighted courses. If you are a staff member, you may want to look at some spotlighted projects.
    • Check out our in-house site Open Pedagogy on the OpenLab, a site for sharing and discussing resources about open digital pedagogy. This site will help you understand what we mean when we talk about learning/ teaching online and in the “open”–from more local topics like adding a final post to a site, to larger issues like the importance of accessibility in our digital spaces, to reminders for and some background info about coworking sessions.
    • Continue to explore the community using various search and filter options: You can search through people, courses, projects, clubs and portfolios using the menu at the top and the magnifying glass in the top-right. Also, you can also search courses, projects, clubs and portfolios –you’ll also find these links under the slider on the OpenLab home page, and in the bar that runs across the top of the OpenLab, and also in the OpenLab menu that you’ll find on the top left corner. From the search page, use the filters (top-right) to tailor your search. Here’s some help showing how you can use the filters, in this case to find a project.
  • Task 2: As you explore, you may find yourself inspired to start creating your course, project, club, or portfolio. To get help with these tasks and using the OpenLab you can:
    • Check out our extensive Help section – it has everything you need to get started joining and building sites on the OpenLab. Get help with everything from Creating a Course, inviting students, sharing materials, and using the WordPress block editor to create content on the OpenLab.
    • Throughout this summer, we have virtual office hours that we call open hours available by request: these  one-on-one consultations with a member of the OpenLab team are open for anyone to sign up for and participate in. You’re welcome to meet with us at any stage of your work, whether you are just starting to think through how you will set up your site or whether you’re at a more advanced stage. As we get closer to the start of the semester, we will share a schedule for open hours and sign-up instructions for open hours, co-working sessions, and workshops.
    • We are available to support you seven days a week via email at openlab@citytech.cuny.edu or via the Contact Us form on the Help page.

Stay tuned for Part 3 of 5, to learn more about creating a site on the OpenLab!

Summer Series 2023-Part 1

Cool and colorful chalk arrows spotted on Union Street in Park Slope” by Jack Szwergold via Flickr CC BY-NC 2.0

A 5-Part Self-Guided Series To Get Everyone Started on the OpenLab

Part 1 of 5: Get to Know the OpenLab

Every summer, the OpenLab Community Team publishes a 5-part series that provides short tasks to help everyone in the City Tech community get to know the OpenLab. That means the semester is 5 weeks away! Every year, City Tech welcomes new students, staff, and faculty members–we’re hoping that if you’re new, or were new not so long ago, you’re finding your way here to learn more! The OpenLab community continues to impress with creativity, adaptability, and compassion that members use to create and collaborate on the OpenLab. We hope that as this series introduces everyone to the OpenLab, it also highlights strategies for cultivating and growing this online community. 

Each week, we will guide everyone through different tasks to start or reinvigorate their work on the OpenLab.  For this first installment, the tasks below will help you create an account and set up your OpenLab profile. 

  • Task 1: Before joining the OpenLab, learn more about the platform. Read the OpenLab’s brief About page to learn more about the ethos and values driving the OpenLab. Take some time to browse through the courses, clubs, projects and portfolios on the OpenLab.
  • Task 3:  Set up your OpenLab profile. You’ll notice as you do this that only some fields are required. You can always come back and complete missing information later when you have time to learn how to manage your account and profile. Your OpenLab profile communicates who you are to the OpenLab community; it can also be indexed in internet search engines, so think carefully about what information you share in your profile. Remember that your user name and your display name do not need to be your real name. Some members use first initial last name, or first name last initial, but others go with something altogether different–it’s up to you to choose a pseudonym that you feel will represent you while also is appropriate to the community you’re joining. Keep in mind that your user name can’t change, but you can change your display name and anything else in your profile.
    • If you are a student, you may want to specify your major/minor, contact information (remember, this is publicly available, so consider what you include carefully!), pronouns, extracurricular interests, any awards or honors you have received, and even a brief overview of your projects and goals. 
    • If you are faculty or staff, in addition to including your pronouns and contact information (remember, this is publicly available!), you may also choose to detail some of your academic interests, as well as your experiences and roles within the college. 
    • Finally, profiles provide the opportunity for OpenLab members to include a photo associated with their OpenLab display name: please note that your photo can be of anything that you feel represents you adequately, and does not have to be an actual photo of yourself. This avatar may appear wherever you contribute on the OpenLab.
  • Task 4: Practice logging in to your account. Sign out of your account and close your browser. Then open a new browser window, navigate back to the OpenLab, and log in to your account.

Stay tuned for Part 2 of 5, when we look at how others use the OpenLab!

Co-working FTW!

Two birds sitting together on a branch.
Twins” by Todd Petit via Flickr CC BY-NC 2.0

One more co-working session for the win!

On Tuesday, May 23rd from 1:30 P.M. to 3:30 PM, join the OpenLab team for the final co-working session of the Spring. As with the previous co-working hours, this space can help support you focus on finishing everything for the end of the semester. If you’re teaching, bring your grading! Or invite a student to join so you can co-work as they finish their project or study for that last exam. Or bring a friend and race to finish your to-do list!

Although our focus for this session is on supporting faculty members finish out the semester, all are welcome. You bring the work, we’ll bring the friendly presence in the Zoom session (plus we’ll bring work, too).

You can work silently in the main Zoom room or move into a breakout room to talk with a collaborator or with one of our team members if you have specific questions we can help you with. 

Not able to make it but want to suggest a day and time for Fall 2023 co-working hours? Please leave a comment to let us know what works for you. And before the start of the new semester, we’ll post our new co-working hours and other support schedule information right here on The Open Road.

Finals end on Tuesday, May 23, and grades are due Friday, May 26th. We hope this co-working session is useful for you–and let us know how else we can help!

In the Spotlight: Spring Eggventure!

COMD Spring Eggventure, Spring 2023

Spring is in full bloom, and there is still time to have fun finding eggs with the COMD Spring Eggventure! The COMD Futures Collaboratory, a Communication Design Department site for student and faculty research collaboration, recently shared an updates about their partnership with Membit Inc, to offer everyone at City Tech a fun break from the hectic end of the semester by setting aside some time to look for these eggs at CityTech. It’s an augmented reality experience geolocated on the first floor of the Pearl Hallway at City Tech. When you are on Campus, stop by the Pearl Hallway to catch some or all of the 10 eggs!

To learn more about the Spring Eggventure, and to download the Membit app you’ll need to find the 10 eggs, visit the COMD Futures Collaboratory site.

Want to share the video with others? Remember that you can always embed a YouTube video in a post or page by using a YouTube block. The easiest way to do that is to type /y in a block and choose YouTube from the options that pop up. Add the link and it will appear as a watchable video in your post or page!

Co-working for Students!

Two butterfiles sitting together on a flower.
twins” by alain01789 via Flickr CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Here’s another co-working session–please help spread the word!

Have you heard of “body doubling”? Do you get more work done when working in the company of others? This practice of working on a task while others are also working on their own projects is becoming very popular on social media. It’s a trend because it works!

With “body doubling” comes accountability and knowing that others are also working, creates some positive stress. And when one is focusing for a short period, while intentionally putting the phone away and avoiding emails, a lot can be done! 

As the end-of-semester stress mounts, the OpenLab is holding a co-working session for students just before Finals week. Join us on Tuesday, May 16th. The Zoom room will be open from 1:30 P.M. to 3:30 P.M. for students to work silently in the same space. Join anytime with that final paper or project and work on tightening its loose parts. Or your study notes for your exam. Or anything else from your to-do list you want to accomplish!

Do you have other productivity or stress management hacks? Share them in the comments below!