
Live chat, weekly digests and newsletters: online tools to boost engagement
Robert Green talks through the digital tools he uses to keep students engaged in their online course during what are, for many, challenging times
Key Details
This video will cover:
01:00 Steps to increase accessibility of online course content
01:38狹sing Teams chat and regular updates to keep students engaged
04:19 Gathering feedback from students on lectures and course content
Transcript
Hello, Im Robert Green and Im a reader in病orensic science at the University of Kent.胼
Thank you for giving me the opportunity today to盎peak to you about some of our ideas in terms of疾ngagement, assessment and feedback in what, for痂any of us, have been rather challenging times.胼
These are just some of the topics Id like to盎peak to you about today, but primarily how weve tried眩o harness accessibility, how weve tried to疲arness the online platforms to give us more畝ccessibility to students, to try to get more疾ngagement, and just some of the ideas that weve真sed throughout the year to try to do that.
You can see that weve tried to engage with眩he student society, weve tried to reinforce眩his more with social media and use Teams to畝ctually promote more actively feedback in a眨ay that weve perhaps ever done before.胼
So, first up, time spent on accessibility.涅t is time-consuming, as the slide says,畜ut believe me its time really well盎pent.
Its appreciated by students.胼浥ust things like making the slides more畝ccessible, particularly for partially sighted皰eople. You can see a screenshot on the left of疽ust one example of that.
Other simple things, like疾nabling the captions when you stream recordings,盍eally does help people to follow, so Im told.胼
So, Ive used Teams to try to support engagement,畝s I mentioned. I record a course, like many of us, and stream all the content. That enables me to get畝 lecture-by-lecture assessment on how many people眨ere in the lecture. You can see on the right疲and side then how I actually feed that back.胼
I download at the end of each lecture the狼eams chat. I found it very difficult to皋ften embed all of the conversation疳nto a one-hour session,畜ut the materials that go into the chat, I will then use to actually follow up眨ith what Ive referred to as a weekly留igest on the module, and also to feedback皋n non-attendance, student non-attendance.
So, this疳s just an example of that, how that enables me to look very quickly with it, literally眨ithin a minute of the lecture closing,疲ow many were there? Are there any recurring眩hemes? Are there any recurring trends? Are盎tudents not accessing the materials?
And畝gain, you can see that the bottom block there,疳ts just a caution really, just to look a little畜it wider than Teams, to widen out ones痂etrics and to look at, you know, how people畝re accessing materials beyond Teams, also.胼
As Ive said, Ive used Teams chat really to症reat effect. Student reaction has been very, very positive. I effectively download all of the畚hat at the end of the lecture and if there are疳tems that weve covered during the session,眩hen Ill put these together in a chat with疹inks to materials, so links back to materials, insights. And thats been received very, very well.胼
I also have a weekly newsletter and one of眩he key features, I think, of our strategy has畜een really to try to enhance that degree皋f personalised contact with the students.狼hose are just some of the weekly topics Ive畜een doing the newsletter now for about eight years and really try to use that as a weekly痂eans of engaging with students,症etting their feedback and giving them盎nippets of information and reinforcing some of眩he messages that I want to get over to them.胼
Like many of us, weve enhanced our provision眨ith the use of workshops. This has been畝 first for me this year. Ive not done眨orkshops previously, but those have been眠ery successful.
You can see just a very盎imple thing I do at the end of each lecture疳s to ask the students in chat just to症ive me a sort of thumbs up or a thumbs down皋r a smiley face, a little emoji, whether or疸ot theyve enjoyed the lecture.
Ive also疹ooked at including quizzes and other things like痂any of us have. This didnt take off immediately,畜ut Ive tried to incentivise眩hat with a weekly book prize病or those students who actually engage with the痂aterials post lecture.
Like many of us, Ive畝lso reduced assessment. So substantially reducing畝ssessments reduces stress and thats been畝 good move forward for us this year to remove眩hese weekly assessments.
Weve helped with the盎tudent盎ociety, enabling us to reach out wider than perhaps had been done in the past. We can now invite people from畝cross the country, across the globe, and open up眩he student society also to friends and families畝nd so forth.
We make active use of social media,盎o we try to put messages out on social media,疹inking students back to to jobs and this眩ype of thing, stories that are in the news,盍esearch and the like.
So, in essence,痂y idea is if I want engagement,涅 have to engage more regularly with students and, I think, particularly in these times,眩o show them how much we care about their疹earning and their enjoyment. Thank you.
This video was produced by Robert Green, reader in forensic science at the .