To see specifics about when the post was edited: If you’re using Reading view, click on the action menu next to the “title of the student’s thread” and select View Post History. If you’re using the Grid view, click on the student’s thread so it’s displayed on the viewing panel, click More Actions button and select History.
Students and many instructors have been begging for this functionality for years, and it was even added a while back, but there wasn’t a clear way for instructors to view when edits to a post had occurred. Now you can now see the original post along with all edited versions of the post with the date & time the changes were made.
You can use the MyEnglishLab gradebook to see where students need improvement and personalise their learning journey. With a quick look at the gradebook or common error report, you can ensure your classes target students' weak areas.
Degrees: B.A. in Linguistics at the University of Texas at Austin. Work history: She has worked as an English editor for 12 years in Seoul, South Korea, mostly in ESL education. Freelance editing work includes English content for business websites, catalogues, product manuals, and market research presentations.
His preferred style is Chicago, his favorite font Garamond, and his most beloved prose writer James Baldwin. Elaine A. earned a BA in English and minored in education at the University of Massachusetts, later adding graduate courses in ESL.
Meanwhile, she continued to nurture her excitement for English both in her teaching and personal writing. In June 2010, she left her teaching career to begin professionally editing. Her pastimes include outdoor recreation, nature photography, and writing poetry.
Suzanne M. grew up in New York and graduated with a Master's degree in Writing and Graphic Design in 2006 from St. Edward's University in Austin, Texas (honors: 4.0 GPA). She has ten years of content management and editorial experience and has edited for Sony, Yahoo, Dell, HP, and World Vision, among many others.
This course will teach you how to use your written words to become more persuasive. You’ll learn creative ways to use syntax, effective techniques for telling stories, and a clever method for arranging a complex series of information.
The mission of the University of Michigan is to serve the people of Michigan and the world through preeminence in creating, communicating, preserving and applying knowledge, art, and academic values, and in developing leaders and citizens who will challenge the present and enrich the future.
In this first week, you will be introduced to instructor Patrick Barry. This week's course content will focus on how the words you choose can change the decisions that people make.
This week, we will focus on how the order of the words you choose can change the decisions people make.
In Week Three, we will focus on combining word choice with word order.
Our final week will focus on filling our writing with compelling details.
Perhaps the most important thing students and professionals of all kinds can do to improve their effectiveness is embrace the following advice: become good with words.
MyEnglishLab provides extra support for your students outside the classroom, when you're not around. As students complete homework they receive extra hints and tips, to encourage and support learning. View MyEnglishLab features.
Pearson Poland measured students' performance on Polish national exams and found that students using MyEnglishLab performed better than the national average. Joanna Grajecka uses MyEnglishLab to not only teach English effectively, but help students learn digital literacy skills.