
How to engage students when some are in the room and some are on Zoom
Flower Darby offers practical tips for keeping all students engaged when teaching a class in which some students are with you in person and others are learning remotely via a teleconferencing platform
Im Flower Darby and today Im thinking about how眩o engage students when you have some students in畝 physical classroom with you, and other students盍emotely joining class via Zoom or a similar video畚onferencing platform.
If you have been teaching疳n this kind of a remote synchronous format,砰ou know it can be very challenging to engage all盎tudents equally.
Well I have some ideas today to疲elp keep all students engaged using the different眩ools and approaches that we have available to us疳n this remote synchronous format, some students疳n the room, some students joining remotely via班oom or a similar video conferencing platform.
First of all, I would encourage us to set the盎ocial norm for students who are attending盍emotely.
Things like camera use. We know眩hat when students have their cameras off its畚hallenging for us to feel like they are really皰resent with us. But recent research has shown眩hat one reason students keep their cameras off is畜ecause everybodys cameras are off.
So a strategy眩hat you can deploy, based on this research,疳s to set the norm that if possible keep your畚ameras on. I dont recommend that we require畚ameras because of the inequities that this can create, however we certainly can encourage盎tudents and say: In this class, we like to keep皋ur cameras on if at all possible. So setting that盎ocial norm will help students to connect and疲elp you to connect with your remote students畝s well.
I would also encourage us to prioritise疾ngaging with our remote students and this is what涅 mean.
The students who are not physically in眩he room with us can easily become marginalised皋r even excluded from whats happening in the畚lassroom, so one way to counteract this tendency疳s to deliberately prioritise your engagement with砰our remote students and to be very transparent畝bout why youre doing that. Im going to look疸ow to see what my online students are doing,留o any of you have any questions?狹se the Zoom raise hand feature.
Do that kind of narration just to acknowledge that疳t is a little bit odd to be talking with students疳n a room and on Zoom at the same time. But when砰ou prioritise engaging with your remote students,疳t helps them to feel welcome and included畝nd therefore fosters their better engagement.
You can also assign a chat monitor, somebody who疳s in the classroom with you, one student, whose眩ask is to keep an eye on the chat box and to let砰ou know if youve missed a comment or question.
They can act as a voice of the chat so to speak.玆ou can even pre-designate times to check in with砰our chat monitor and say: has anything come真p in the chat box that we should attend to?胼
You can also use tools that all students should疲ave access to, whether theyre in the classroom皋r again remote off-site somewhere.
Generally盎peaking, students do have a smartphone available眩o them and so structuring class activity真sing tools like Poll Everywhere or Mentimeter,砰ou can ask polling questions, you can check病or understanding, you can engage students疳n word cloud activities, and this does not疸ecessarily require that all students are in Zoom皋r that all students are in the classroom.浩verybody can engage from wherever they are眨hen you create those kinds of class activities.
And finally, you can also structure individual盍eflections and tasks. When it is challenging to疼eep students engaged and have them communicating畝cross modalities and space and distance. Perhaps you want to provide a guided notes document that盎tudents can complete individually throughout the class period, provide moments for reflection畝nd questions and then collect that guided疸otes document at the end of class.
Students畚an turn it in online via the learning management盎ystem, for example, just as a way to foster more疳ndividual processing, still active learning and疾ngagement, without needing to manage the barriers畝nd the challenges of communication across畝 distance in real time.
Just a few ideas to症et us thinking about how to engage students when盎ome are in the room and some are in Zoom. Thanks.
This video was produced by涌lower Darby,畝 scholar of equitable and inclusive teaching and learning atNorthern Arizona University.
Key Details
This video will cover:
00:46 Setting the social norm for remote students cameras to be turned on
01:39 Prioritise engaging with remote students when teaching a hybrid class
02:55 Using tools and classroom activities that work for all students, whether in the class or remote