For faculty, Course Hero gives you the chance to see how students are sharing the information you teach them, and to look at the different ways other professors are teaching similar subjects. You can get ideas, know which tests and homework problems were most difficult and gather tools to better teach your classes.
You also can’t track who is using Course Hero. Often, notes are posted anonymously, so the individual who posted them cannot be tracked down. This means that it’s harder to punish those who are blatantly cheating or difficult to tell if the resources available can really be trusted.
If the goal is to have students learn the subject, and looking at Course Hero helps, maybe it’s not such a bad thing after all? Maybe it is useful to try to teach students to use these new resources responsibly instead of banning it from the classroom. Some other things instructors can do to fight against cheating:
Despite the good things Course Hero claims to offer, the most glaring question is this: Is using Course Hero cheating? Each of the websites offering these services overtly addresses this question. The answer they all come up with is, of course, No. Most of the websites have safeguards against what they consider cheating.
Post only answers, and not questions, on CULearn for homework and tests—that way the answers won’t mean as much. Give students old tests to study from, so that there is no reason for them to search online. This could help to level the playing field for those who would have cheated and those who never would.
Course Hero isn’t really free. While you can create an account for no cost, you can’t view anything until you pay in one of two ways: By posting materials (40 documents = 1 month free) By paying a monthly, 6 month, or yearly fee.
It provides a temptation to students who are looking for exam answers and want to cheat in class. You also can’t track who is using Course Hero. Often, notes are posted anonymously, so the individual who posted them cannot be tracked down.
You can join a study group and meet students in your class you otherwise might not have worked with. You can choose to study through the internet, or meet at a physical table and chairs on campus. In this way, Course Hero allows you to make connections with others who you can help, and who can help you.
After a series of ecological disasters and a great war, the nation of Panem has risen "out of the ashes" of what was once North America. Panem, composed of a decadent Capitol ringed by 12 impoverished districts, has evolved into a brutal dictatorship.
The events of The Hunger Games are narrated in the first-person point of view, from the perspective of Katniss Everdeen, the main character.
The first book in Suzanne Collins's trilogy is called The Hunger Games. The title refers to an annual televised competition that pits youth from around the nation of Panem against one another in a fight to the death.
Undosho Bēta?) is one of the training areas located in U.A. High School .
Ground Beta was the main setting of the Battle Trial, where the trials took place inside the course's buildings. The exercise consisted of two opposing teams of two going against each other, simulating a confrontation between heroes and villains.
Shortly after the Provisional Hero License Exam, the ground was used as the setting for a battle between Izuku Midoriya and Katsuki Bakugo, with Katsuki having chosen the place specifically because of the Battle Trial Arc, where he had suffered a loss against Izuku. The fight was found out by a patrolling security robot, alerting Shota Aizawa.