Update to Blackboard coming in May
Blackboard, the University of Cincinnati's Learning Management System, will be updated in May to ensure the protection of student data and address known issues users may experience.
The update is scheduled for Friday, May 4, beginning at 7 a.m. Changes are expected to take approximately four hours to complete. During this time, Blackboard services will be unavailable, but are anticipated to be restored by 11 a.m.
Scheduling considerations have taken into account grade submissions and course preparation for spring and summer semesters.
If you experience any difficulties within Blackboard before or after the update, please see IT@UCs 1-2-3 Support Options which include the IT@UC Knowledge Base, 24/7 Canopy Support, and the Help Desk available at (513) 556-HELP (4357). You may also report issues online by submitting a UCIT Helpdesk ticket.
For more detailed information about the Blackboard upgrade occurring Friday, May 4, please visit the Blackboard Update webpage.
Related Stories
Mayor Pureval, Rob Richardson lead ethical AI symposium
July 5, 2024
As artificial intelligence rapidly integrates into everyday life, Rob Richardson, CEO and founder of Disrupt Now and MidwestCon and local tech startup partner of the University of Cincinnati 1819 Innovation Hub, recently spearheaded the Responsible AI Symposium with Cincinnati Mayor Aftab Pureval, calling upon community leaders to discuss and ensure artificial intelligence technologies help users rather than harm.
How to keep birds from flying into your windows
![Yahoo! News icon](/content/dam/refresh/uc-news/news-icons/dark/yahoo.png)
July 3, 2024
UC College of Arts and Sciences professor Ron Canterbury tells the Indianapolis Star that simple steps can prevent birds from strike windows around your home or business. Yahoo! News shares the story.
Get to know CCM’s newest faculty and staff members
July 3, 2024
UC’s College-Conservatory of Music will welcome a variety of new faculty and staff members to its roster of distinguished performing and media arts experts, researchers and educators this fall.