
| OLOR Series: | Research in Online Literacy Education |
| Author(s): | Ann Marie Francis |
| Original Publication Date: | 19 December 2025 |
| Permalink: |
<gsole.org/olor/role/vol4.iss2.d> |
Keywords: Online education, assessment, pedagogy, high impact teaching practices
[14] For best results, I have found that the extension should not be extensive; 48 hours will work to provide students with extra time to complete an assignment they have fallen behind on without snowballing and affecting other assignments and due dates. When I provided an extension of up to a week, the students would often focus on the late work and fall behind on future assignments, resulting in the opposite desired outcomes. Of course, the extension time will vary depending on how your class is structured. For my online classes, deadlines are usually at the end of the work week, which means the 48-hour extension gives students the weekend to complete the work and get it submitted without interfering with future course modules. [15] A key benefit of this policy is that faculty do not need to decide what constitutes a justifiable reason for an extension. One complaint about being flexible with deadlines is that faculty are then responsible for determining if the students’ reasons for needing an extension are worthy of offering an extension, something not all faculty are comfortable doing. In addition, students who have reasons that may not be approved can still have flexibility when needed. For example, students who cannot afford to see the doctor or students who are sick, but not sick enough to visit the doctor (a 24-hour stomach bug does not warrant a trip to the doctor) can make the decision to use the extension without having to explain their situation to their professor or produce a doctor’s note. Some students may need to use the extension because of poor time management skills or because they are facing technology or internet connectivity issues. With this approach, the reason for the late work doesn’t matter. The students decide if they want to use their one extension based on their individual circumstances. This policy gives students complete ownership in deciding when to use the extension, provides a safety net to get some extra time when needed, and shows that the faculty trusts the online students, thereby fostering learning in online classes. [16] Implementing this option is not difficult. Faculty should include the policy (see policy sample in Figure 1) in the course syllabus and outline any specific requirements to get the extension, like emailing the extension request by a certain time. While it can be tempting to require that students must request the extension before the due date, it is better to be flexible there as well. If a student submits a paper late, there is no harm in emailing and asking if they would like to use the major paper extension that is outlined in the syllabus to avoid late penalties. Referencing the syllabus for details also reminds students the importance of referring to the syllabus throughout the semester. This simple approach lets students know that you care and want them to succeed while also putting their best interests first, which is a primary part of the design thinking process and key to online course development (Cohn and Greer, 2023, p. 19). Another way to ensure students are aware of the policy is to remind them about the option before major assignments are due. A quick announcement in an online class to point out that if students need extra time, there is the option to take the 48-hour extension can help students feel less stressed. [17] When students email asking for the extension, it is best to respond to let them know you received the request, inform them that it was approved, and provide the new due date for the assignment to avoid any suggestions later that they weren’t sure what the new due date was. Then go to the LMS and add the extension for the assignment for that specific student. Most LMS systems have the option to add special access to assignment folders for one student which changes the due date for that specific student, a process that is typically easy and straightforward. The added benefit is that the student will see the new due date in both the LMS and in the faculty’s email response, avoiding any confusion of when the extension ends. [18] This approach does require faculty to track which students have used their major project extension, something many faculty complain about when it comes to giving extensions. This task, however, is made fairly easy by using the online gradebook and creating an item that is worth zero points. If you add a grade item entitled “Major Assignment Extension,” make it a text field instead of a numerical field, and have the assignment worth zero points, you will have a place to record which assignment a student uses the extension for. Then faculty can add which assignment the student used the extension for as part of the recordkeeping process. The gradebook also keeps everyone on the same page. The students can easily see that it was added to the gradebook, so they are aware that they have used the extension. At the end of the semester, faculty should add an extension to the last major assignment for all students who did not already use the extension, again making sure everyone in the class has the same opportunities for a little extra time on a major assignment. [19] I have been using this method for several semesters and it has worked very well. Most students (78.6%) use the extension before the last assignment. As I stress that they do not need to give a reason, most email requesting the extension without an explanation as to why, and many will add notes of thanks for the opportunity to spend more time on the assignments. Very few (1.8%) request an extension on their first assignment, but the requests increase as the semester continues and the demands and stresses on students increase. For the second assignment, 6.2% request an extension; for the third assignment, 33.2% make the request, and for the fourth assignment 37.4%. The students are able to choose the point during the semester to use the extension based on when it will benefit them the most. |
[21] Like the major assignment extension, I recommend a fairly short grace period of about 48 hours, enough to give students extra time to complete the assignment, but not so much that it will affect future assignments. Others have found success with longer grace periods. Schroeder et al. (2019) gave their online graduate students up to five days to submit work late without penalty and found the longer grace period helped reduce stress for both the students who used the grace period and those who did not. Personally, I have found that students who are focusing on catching up on previous assignments are often falling further behind on current work, so I prefer a shorter grace period. I am also teaching primarily undergraduate students, with many classes composed of only freshmen, as opposed to Schroeder, Makarenko, and Warren’s graduate students, which may also affect the most effective length for any grace periods provided. [22] Providing a grace period on all assignments is an easy way to include assessment flexibility in an online course. The course continues to move forward after the original due date. The course content is still progressing as if everyone submitted their work according to the original due date. That original due date is communicated throughout the semester. All calendars, assignment prompts, and communication should have the original due date so that students are aware of when the assignment is due, and the grace period should be communicated through the syllabus and when asked about late work. It is also a good practice to remind students of the grace period, especially if there is an increase in the number of students asking about late work or other indications that students are struggling to meet the deadline. A quick reminder announcement in the LMS is always appreciated by students. [23] One benefit of this approach is that students can have extra time without making demands on the faculty. Often the grace period can be designed so that students have extra time to complete the work but must ask any questions before the grace period ends. For example, many faculty like to have online assignments due each Friday by 11:59 p.m. That provides students Friday to ask questions, a weekday when most faculty are checking email and are available to provide guidance. However, if faculty are going to spend the weekend away from work and not grade until Monday at the earliest, it does no harm to give students until Sunday at 11:59 p.m. to submit work without any penalty. Because the work was originally due on Friday, there are no expectations that faculty should be answering questions about the assignment over the weekend, which provides the weekend for faculty to spend time away from work and the online classroom, promoting a work-life balance. [24] This approach can seem like it is just extending the deadline for everyone, but in reality, faculty are setting a deadline but giving students the option to take more time if they need to. Similar to the major assignment extension, the grace period provides students flexibility when they need it, regardless of reason. Unlike the major assignment extension, the grace period allows faculty to grant agency to students without any additional work on the faculty’s part, as there is no tracking or responding to student emails. Students do not need to reach out to faculty or even let the faculty know that they are using the grace period, yet they can take advantage of it. [25] The process is simple. All work has a due date, and that date is indicated in the LMS. It is important that the calendar and all assessments in the LMS indicate the due date, not the date the grace period expires, although all assignment drop boxes should remain open until the grace period ends. All of the major LMS systems differentiate between when the assignment is due and when the drop box closes. Keeping the assignment drop box open during the grace period allows students to submit assignments during the grace period without any work from the instructor. Students must know when the work is due and to plan their time accordingly. When students get stressed or overwhelmed, faculty can mention the grace period. By doing so, faculty are offering the gift of an extension without requiring students to provide excuses or rationale for why they were unable to complete the work according to the original schedule. It gives students agency and creates no extra work for faculty, providing assessment flexibility without stress and benefitting both students and faculty. |
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