Student Engagement During Hybrid Learning@LisaBerghoff/@MrKimDHS
Unsurprisingly, it seems like staff and students have been able to adjust to the added hurdle of essentially teaching and learning in two unique and separate environments at the same time. But while we're keeping our boat afloat, it is clear that we still need some instruction and guidance on where the ship is headed. Even though we can put together the technical pieces of getting Zoom and your webcam and your projector all powered up and interconnected, it's going to be a heck of a challenge to use those synergies to create authentic learning for kids.
After the novelty of Zoom/Meet wore off long ago, I'm sure you've felt the uneasy feeling that something wasn't quite right about collaborating via video conference. It became exhausting teaching to a bunch of squared, blank faces on your computer screen, and if you've ever been on the participant side of a video conference meeting, I'm sure you know how hard it can be to stay engaged and how easy it can be to mute yourself and turn off video. So with hybrid learning, I'm finding that I'm increasingly worried about splitting my attention between my physical students, who generally seem revitalized and eager to communicate live, and your students on the other side of the screen. So how do we keep our remote students engaged, while simultaneously taking advantage of students being in the classroom?
Tools for formative checks: Physical vs Remote
Continue utilizing instructional tech tools to structure conversation and collaboration with your remote students in small groups. This strategy isn't new, but now you've got some decisions to make about your physical students. Do you ask your physical students to take out their Chromebooks and interact with your remote students the same way they would've done if they were at home? Maybe, maybe not. I constantly think about their incentives for being in the building. If we ask them to do the same thing they would've done at home, but now with masks, are we effectively leveraging the benefits of their physical presence? Perhaps create a Jamboard session and have students groups create their own graphical representations of a problem or solution. Have your physical students interact on the actual whiteboard (social distancing of course), take a picture of their work and upload it as a separate frame for your remote students to see. While that may not seem like much of a structural difference, I've already noticed a stark contrast in engagement with my physical students.
Instructional Tools for Formative checks (among many...don't have to do them all. Pick a few that work for your students)
Staying connected with Communication
- Google Chat: Create a room and threaded conversations that are easily archived and accessed
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