Virginia Tech Mechanical Engineering, Summer 2020 Vol. 5 No. 1 Summer 2020 | Page 12

teaching videos, some faculty have adapted test materials to match. “I can make takehome exams more comprehensive than inclass exams,” said Mark Pierson. “Students now have videos that they can review to help them with homework and exams that they did not have before.” Another challenge: the physical space in which instructors worked. COVID-19 didn’t just close university facilities. It also closed local schools, day cares, and businesses. Instructor Jonathan Boreyko found that one of his greatest challenges was holding a teaching space with small children present. “I have four young children at home, and my class is during lunch time. The only office space in my house is right next to the dining room, so my students can hear my kids loudly eating and sometimes they even barge in when my wife isn’t looking. One day, one of my sons joined my class with a lion mask on his face.” Perhaps the greatest difficulty has been maintaining lab experience. These handson experiences provide direct contact with the principles learned in textbooks, reinforcing principles through tactile practice. In most cases, this can be remedied by carrying out experiments and demonstrations on camera, but some research did translate well to the virtual environment. Producing code is an integral part of mechanics, and some labs took the code students produced into labs to as Thomas Laboratory componen puter. The curriculum the stay-at Beyond advisors w on track ac riod each s are permit next term classes wer In order to lost in the sophomor had not alr prevent stu kept them munity. While th certainly n from stude Professor J ymous sur allowing s about thei “I think yo handling t being so le up to still h