My Authors
Read all threads
I've been chatting to some colleagues about student engagement in the blended classroom. There are some understandable worries about participation in online engagements. So I thought I would throw together this thread with some thoughts, advice, and tips. [thread]
Firstly, remember that the online space is very different from the physical, and there are many reasons why a student may be struggling to participate... 👏THIS 👏DOES 👏NOT 👏MEAN 👏THEY 👏ARE 👏DISENGAGED. (2/25)
A student may be living in a rural area with poor quality internet. When I lived in Wales, I once lived in a house with a connection so slow and unreliable it regularly couldn't cope with YouTube (A live stream would have been very difficult). (3/25)
Also, with the current COVID situation, local lockdowns, and mature students we have a range of potential issues. A student could be homeschooling their kid, or caring for an elderly relative. All these could be preventing them from joining session X at time Y. (4/25)
For this reason, asynchronous content is super important. Record sessions, direct people to alternate sources, book chapters (the OG asynchronous), YouTube videos, PodCasts, Collaborative notes or even Talis Elevate resources. Give students every chance to stay engaged. (5/25)
Be wary of poling systems that require students to leave a live session. Polling systems are great for formative assessment but many polling tools require students to click a link which takes them to an external website. This can cause confusion and disengagement. (6/25)
If the student relies on captions or lip-reading they can't keep track of what you are saying if they have to leave the stream to do a poll. Just ask @Lincoln_BSL. So at a minimum, you should pause the session and not keep talking during the polling phase (7/25)
You can give people X amount of time to do the poll, but very hard to guarantee that everyone will go to the site at the same time. Some students may be on slower connections, others may be struggling to keep pace with the content. (8/25)
I'm not saying that you shouldn't use these polls! Poling is a great tool for formative assessment. But consider when/how you use them. Some polls make great between-session or pre-session activities. If you want to do one mid-session, one that works within the stream (9/25)
For example, @MicrosoftTeams allows you to embed forms into the chat. You can also use the "Hands up" function for simple yes/no polling. Also using emoji responses to chat questions can give you some complex polling opportunities. Other systems available for Zoom etc (10/25)
Their other issues sending people away from a session to an external website. Loads of opportunity for user error. I've been to many a virtual conference where people have had to click on a link and accidentally closed the session and struggled to get back in. (11/25)
For this reason, use caution with "breakout rooms" which can suffer from the same issues. I've seen a lot of educators lose students by moving them between rooms. Clicking the wrong link or accidentally closing the system and students drop-out of the session. (12/25)
Shunting people between spaces can be confusing for everyone involved, and often requires a certain amount of shepherding. I've seen academics lost and confused in breakout rooms from working groups - It's no easier for students. Confusion is a key barrier to engagement. (13/25)
However, breakout rooms can be used to your advantage allowing for collaboration and discussion in small(er) groups. But these may be best left for the start or the end of the session, so students only need to move once. (14/25)
The best use of breakout rooms I have seen is as a separately timetabled pre-session activity. Flipping the learning, and getting the students to bring ideas for discussion. This was then brought together during the main session. (15/25)
Ice breaker exercises can be a great way to promote participation. One fun one I use is asking participants to post a GIF in answer to a question, something abstract like "what are your hopes and dreams". It's a good, fun way to get people to focus on the session (16/25)
Consider having student ambassadors/demonstrators as "Chat MCs". These students promote discussion by posting questions in the chat around the content of the session. I've done this in my 'video games streams', and they have been really effective in promoting engagement (17/25)
Rethink your session length. Adding scheduled breaks can help maintain engagement. sitting in front of a computer hearing someone talk for an hour is challenging. Throw in debates, videos, games, activities, to break-up the session into thematic chunks (18/25)
Remember that students may be feeling socially isolated. Provide a bit of time in your session for pastoral engagement. Give an opportunity to chat, discuss the programme, talk about challenges in a safe and supported space. (19/25)
Do things that prompt active engagement "Put your hand up if you think X is correct", "post a gif that demonstrates Y", "Answer this question in the chat" These classroom assessment techniques can help people to reconnect with the session - especially in a longer session! (20/25)
If you have the opportunity, consider pair or co-delivery. A discussion is inherently more engaging and we see this format a lot in YouTube videos and live streams. One person talking to a camera can look awkward, a discussion feels more natural. (21/25)
Another advantage of leaning into flipped-learning/asynchronous delivery is that you can avoid presentations. Plenty of research out there that shows that streams are more engaging when the learners can see the person teaching. (22/25)
If you need to use presentations in your sessions, using software like OBS can allow you to project yourself into your presentation using a picture-in-picture technique. I wrote about how to do that on this blog post chrisheadleand.com/2020/07/02/usi… (23/)
Try to keep your video as clear and crisp as possible. Make sure it points directly at your face (not up your nose). Raising your laptop off your desk with a few books can help here. I wrote about improving video on this post - chrisheadleand.com/2020/06/23/fil… (24/25)
The same goes for audio. The only time I have (personally) ever walked out of a session was due to the amount of echo on the call (it made the speaker almost inaudible). It was also "irritating" which is a barrier to engagement chrisheadleand.com/2020/06/27/imp… (25/25) Done!
Also, check out @pedPancakes a teaching and learning seminar series we host every two weeks at @unilincoln - loads of practice sharing from colleagues across the sector :-) great fun and everyone welcome :-)
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh.

Keep Current with Dr Chris Headleand

Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

Twitter may remove this content at anytime, convert it as a PDF, save and print for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video

1) Follow Thread Reader App on Twitter so you can easily mention us!

2) Go to a Twitter thread (series of Tweets by the same owner) and mention us with a keyword "unroll" @threadreaderapp unroll

You can practice here first or read more on our help page!

Follow Us on Twitter!

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3.00/month or $30.00/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!