CSC/ECE 517 Spring 2021 - E2115. Mentor management for assignments without topics

From Expertiza_Wiki
Revision as of 22:00, 28 March 2021 by Bwanza (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Introduction

Team Members

  • Yi Qiu
  • Ryan Smith
  • Jose Molina Melendez
  • Bahati Wanza

Problem Statement

Currently, Expertiza has no way to associate mentors with teams. For assignments with topics, like the OSS project, mentors are associated with topics, and then whichever team is assigned to the topic inherits the mentor for that topic However, for assignments without topics (like Program 2), there is no good way to “automatically” assign mentors to projects. The instructor needs to watch teams being formed, and every time a new team is formed, a new mentor needs to be assigned, outside of Expertiza. This leads to a lot of work for the instructor, as well as sometimes long delays before a team is assigned a mentor.

The Plan

For assignments without topics, mentors should be assigned to teams. Assume that things happen in the following order:

  • An assignment without topics is created that requires teams of size of up to k.
  • Students sign up for teams.
  • When a team reaches a target size of greater than 50% of the maximum teammate capacity, then:
    • A mentor will be assigned to this team and notified via email.
    • Participants in an assignment will be identified as mentors via their participant permissions (see the E1963 documentation). This adds a fourth, “mentor” permission to the existing three permissions (“submit”, “review”, and “take quiz”). Anyone with “mentor” permission for an assignment is eligible to be automatically assigned to mentor a team when a new team is formed.

What needs to be done

Develop a trigger that:

  • Is activated when any team has been formed that has k members, where k is greater than 50% of the maximum team capacity
    • ex: max members = 4, trigger activated when the team size reaches 3
  • Assign a mentor to the team
    • Mentors should be evenly assigned to teams, so a good strategy is to assign the mentor who has the fewest teams to mentor so far.
  • Notify the mentor via email that they are now assigned to a specific team, and provide the email addresses of the team members.
  • Possibly notify the team members that they have been assigned the mentor with contact information (further discussion here).