(UZT) Time tracking changes & Virtual Classrooms
Applicable for learners who started before 2024-09
Since Discord tracking was introduced, we were working to make it more convenient while continuing to meet all the UZT requirements. We finally have an update about changes to the time tracking system, starting from September 2nd. We hope these changes will make it easier for most of you to reach the requirements set by UZT and to gain the required skills more efficiently.
You can find the details of all the changes below.
Why are we making these changes?
The updated system is designed to accurately track the actual time spent learning while also being as minimally invasive and distracting to the learning process as possible. We improved upon our first version, listening to learners' feedback. The updates aim to be in line with Turing College learning principles and minimize the risk of abusing the time tracking system.
A large amount of learning hours to choose according to your availability ensures that you can still study flexibly. The core idea of self-paced, mastery-approach learning remains – a learner only moves through sprints and modules when they are ready, which the project reviews and no-lecture approach guarantees. We also observe that planning your study time in advance is an extremely useful learning strategy, and these updates will encourage it even more. Finally, learning in a community of other like-minded people has always been our core value and Virtual Classrooms led by mentors create that opportunity. While we will constantly polish and improve our processes, we do not expect any more major changes such as this in the foreseeable future.
Minimum study time to finish the program
Current UZT learners, based on how much time they have tracked so far, have a different minimum number of hours each week that they need to track. This is because UZT allows missing up to 20% of all learning activities without needing to explain their absence. Furthermore, the needed tracked time can be reduced further by updating learning schedules to exclude breaks. This can result in as little as 1 hour per week for those who started in February, and as much as ~21 hours for those who started in late June. However, tracking less than 30 hours per week would result in a proportionally reduced stipend from UZT. The exact minimum needed hours can differ slightly for each learner and will be seen in the platform from the start of September.
The table below gives an estimate for the required minimum hours per week for learners depending on the start date (the exact number can depend on the Discord hours tracked since mid-July and will be seen in the platform). The “Minimum hours needed per week (average)” indicates how many hours per week a learner should spend on average starting from September to not go below the 80% requirement:
UZT Start date | UZT End date | Minimum hours needed per week (average) |
---|---|---|
Earlier than 2024-03-01 | Various | 1 hour per week to meet the requirement of not missing 5 days of activities in a row without justifiable reasons. |
2024-03-25 | 2024-10-30 | 5 |
2024-03-25 | 2024-10-10 | 8 |
2024-04-02 | 2024-10-17 | 11 |
2024-04-03 | 2024-10-18 | 12 |
2024-04-05 | 2024-10-22 | 12 |
2024-04-29 | 2024-11-14 | 17 |
2024-05-02 | 2024-11-18 | 17 |
2024-05-27 | 2024-12-11 | 20 |
2024-06-25 | 2025-01-14 | 21 |
Individualized UZT schedules
To fully avoid any potential issues with UZT in the future, we must ensure that all the tracked learning activity hours happen during times set in advance in your learning schedule (“tvarkaraštis”) which is signed by us and you. The learning schedule must contain 30 pure hours of learning per week (i.e. 40 academic hours of learning without any breaks included). Even though Nacionalinė Švietimo Agentūra agreed that it would be enough to rely on the calendar available on our platform, we could not get UŽT to confirm that this works for them – currently they still ask us to provide schedules as signed documents. To make this as little of a burden as possible for learners, we have created a system that allows each learner to set their individual schedule, generate a document containing it, and to change it when needed.
The exact process is:
Each learner first needs to sign a document which confirms that agreeing to calendar changes in the platform is equivalent to a qualified e-signature. This makes it possible to change the calendar without needing to sign a document each time.
The platform will guide you through setting hours so that all rules are followed. Once hours are chosen and confirmed by us, we will ask you to confirm these changes.
We will only track time in the hours during which your calendar has learning activities scheduled. Activities that are tracked are: Virtual Classrooms, Open Sessions, Project reviews, Stand-ups. If you are in an activity that is happening on Zoom, you do not need to simultaneously be present in Discord as well.
You can choose between updating the schedule for the current week only vs. updating it for the next and the following weeks.
You can change the calendar daily
Until 9th of September 2024, we will still track time during all hours (6am-midnight weekdays, 6am-20pm weekends) based on the same rules as before (active status on Discord).
Pure online status in Discord will no longer be tracked starting 9th of September, 2024.
Requirements for individual schedules
Employed learners
Schedule needs to contain exactly 30 hours
Each day must have no more than 9 hours
There should be no more than 3 consecutive hours of learning
The schedule must contain exactly 5 days with learning activities
You are free to study at any day of the week, weekends included.
Unemployed learners
Schedule needs to contain exactly 30 hours
Each day must have no more than 6 hours
There should be no more than 3 consecutive hours of learning
By the laws of UZT, you unfortunately are not allowed to track attendance over the weekend.
Note that the minimum attendance requirement for the rest of your studies depends on your learning start date and it will surely be lower than 30hrs/week.
If we do not have a correctly filled-out form in time before the new time tracking takes place, an updated original schedule will be used, containing the following hours on workdays:
9:00 - 12:00
13:00 - 16:00
How is hourly stipend rate calculated when Turing College is covering it?
There are two different hourly rates for stipends available. The rate you receive will depend on whether you are currently employed or unemployed. For those who are employed, the rate is 0.3 times the minimum hourly rate, which is currently 5.65 euros per hour. This means that the stipend amount would be 1.70 euros (0.3 * 5.65). For those who are unemployed, the rate is 0.5 times the minimum hourly rate, resulting in a stipend amount of 2.83 euros (0.5 * 5.65) or a fixed unemployment benefit amount, which is calculated individually by Sodra. Please note that these calculations are based on 40 academic hours per week. However, the final amount you receive will depend on the actual number of hours you have learned during the month.
Virtual Classrooms
A Virtual Classroom is a learning activity that makes it easy to study at your own pace, track the required learning hours, and get even more individualized support from your peers and Turing College mentors in real time.
Virtual Classrooms are specific voice channels on Discord that you join whenever you are studying. Learners of your program and a Turing College mentor, ready to help you, would be joining as well. While in a Virtual Classroom, you can either focus on studying on your own or engage in discussions with others to get any kind of help that you need.
For each Virtual Classroom, there will be two voice main channels: Study Room and Discussions Table. Furthermore, you will see additional channels called “Individual Conversations” which are meant to allow you to have more private 1–1 or smaller group calls with mentors or peers and get the learning time tracked.
Study Room is the default room which you should join. The goal of learners here is to study the topics relevant for them with minimal interruptions. Once a learner encounters a question that they want to discuss with others, they should announce it in the Study Room and move to the Discussions Table voice channel to discuss the question in-depth. A Turing College mentor may also start some of the Virtual Classrooms by asking everyone to give stand-up-like updates about their progress, to ensure that everyone is progressing without issues.
Discussions Table is where learners and Turing College mentors discuss specific questions without interrupting those in the Study Room. The format is similar to open sessions, where those trying to help will primarily try to guide the learner towards the answer. Similarly to other events, we will always encourage other learners to try to help before the mentor does, as that lets more people benefit from peer learning. The mentor would then try to answer the question as well or, if their specialization is different than the question asked, would let you know that they will find a mentor who specializes in that specific topic. This is another benefit that Virtual Classrooms provide - a Turing College representative that would help you to more connect with someone specializing in a specific topic more efficiently.
Individual conversation tables will have a smaller limit of people, in case you want to have a private discussion with a mentor or a peer. Similar to the Discussions Table, these should only be attended for active discussions and not for silent work.
Since the number of Virtual Classrooms per week is expected to be very large (up to 118 hours of virtual classrooms per week), they will not be separated by batches (i.e., someone from DM_2024-02 batch would be able to join the same Virtual Classroom with someone from DM_2024-06). Furthermore, due to similarity of topics in DS, DA and DE programs, learners from these 3 programs will share the same Virtual Classrooms. This should result in more active Virtual Classrooms and more opportunities for connecting with a wide variety of fellow learners - whether it’s for learning together or simply networking.
Full details about Virtual Classrooms can be found here.
Changes to standups
Since Virtual Classrooms cover many of the same aspects that stand-ups do, we will be reducing the amount stand-ups. The most popular ones will be made accessible to all batches that have been already learning for 1 month or more.
New learners (those starting in September 2024 and further) will have stand-ups for the first month (4 stand-ups in total) only within their batches to get acquainted with their peers in a more personal environment. Afterwards, the batch standups would be replaced with access to the general ones available to all other learners.
Exceptions:
Digital Explorers II project and Digital Explorers Iraq Edition batches will continue to have stand-ups as before, since their groups do not contain any learners financed by UZT.
Changing how we track learning at Discord
Pure online status in Discord will no longer be tracked starting 2st of September, 2024. Instead, only hours in Virtual Classrooms, Open Sessions, and Project Reviews will be tracked when they coincide with your individual UZT Learning Schedule.
Pure online status in Discord tracking was confirmed as a valid form of learning activity tracking by Nacionalinė Švietimo Agentūra (NŠA) after carefully reviewing our teaching model. However, we see voice channels as a much more accurate way to track pure learning hours. It also avoids situations where learners might accidentally leave Discord on for a long time without studying, or in the worst case, even abuse the system. Virtual classrooms are thus meant to ensure there is no doubt to UZT about the exact time spent learning.
Our position still remains that the competency-based approach, which we used since the beginning of Turing College, is the most effective to ensure not only that the learners spend the time required, but also that they acquire the knowledge needed. Once UZT informed us that this is no longer viable, we saw Discord activity as the next most learner-friendly approach. Adding Virtual Classrooms and Individual UZT schedules is our next iteration of this, which aims to maintain as much flexibility as possible while also fostering the community aspect of learning. We will aim to further improve this approach, as much as possible within the limits of UZT rules, and as always, will welcome feedback and ideas from all learners.
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