Over the last year, the rapid
shift to emergency remote teaching and online learning has posed significant
challenges (and opportunities) to education systems around the world. As
teachers, we’ve had to learn all sorts of skills and strategies to keep
teaching, even with little or no access to technology. We’ve had to encourage
our students to keep learning at the same time that we’re all dealing with the
effects of a global pandemic. It has not been easy, but things are starting to
look better. We have become more resilient, more resourceful, and better
problem solvers. You’ve probably learned to do something you did not know you
were capable of!
Engaging Students and
Teachers in Online Environments
As instructors in the TESOL
Certificate: Developing an Online Teaching Program (DOTP), we are
interested in what online engagement looks like. We’ve heard numerous teachers
express concern about their students not wanting to speak or participate in
class. Some teachers have also expressed being overwhelmed or feeling burnout. Both
student and teacher engagement are crucial to institutions.
Engagement can be defined as students
being involved in their own learning (Kuh, 2009) and often translates into
higher retention and satisfaction rates, better academic outcomes, and higher
curricular relevance (Dyment et al., 2013; Redmond et al., 2018). Engagement
also plays an important role in advancing social justice. If we engage all our students, we can help ensure that they have an
equal chance of success in life. Now, the question is: How can we engage
students and keep ourselves engaged as teachers in online learning
environments?
In the following YouTube video, we
invited Franco Cook, a Peruvian teacher and former DOTP participant, to discuss
how we can find and share our passions online. We argue that by sharing more
about who we are and what we love, as teachers we can keep ourselves more
engaged in our courses. The more we enjoy discussing ideas with our students,
or reading the assignments we have given them because we find them interesting,
the more engaged we stay in our own course. If you have taught online, you know
how important it is to keep yourself interested!
Students also benefit from feeling
connected to the course. Staying engaged can help them achieve higher cognitive
and emotional engagement online (Trowler, 2010). Students who are cognitively
engaged are invested in their learning, embrace challenges, and seek to go
beyond the bare minimum. When students are emotionally engaged, they feel more
connected to the course and have a sense of belonging. With both teachers and
students feeling engaged in an online course, we can end up with a vibrant
online community of people who are excited to share their passions. In the
video, we discuss four ideas to engage ourselves as teachers and to engage our
students:
This video is part of A Cup of Coffee
with TESOL Experts, a YouTube series created by instructors and participants in
the TESOL DOTP Certificate Program. The series is in fact a passion project
itself. We started using videos to bring together our DOTP students and other
professionals in the field. Little by little, it has expanded to more topics
and has created a wider community. We have all been able to learn more about
connecting online, creating videos, and networking during this journey as well.
The idea for the series is simple. We
invite guest experts to discuss a question that relates to online English
teaching. Our goal is to share research and best practices using accessible
language in a short and fun video. We used to make YouTube videos for our
students but kept them private. In the spirit of open educational resources,
why not share these with others?
In this YouTube series, we have
discussed various topics, such as:
How to teach vocabulary to
students reluctant to read
How to teach pronunciation
in the age of world Englishes
How to foster online
teacher communities of practice
How to engage students in
live sessions
How to design online
learning for low bandwidth contexts
How to network and benefit
from professional associations
You can browse this playlist
to check out previous episodes. You can also submit and vote for a question for
future episodes here.
DOTP: Developing Safe
Spaces to Cultivate Teaching Passions
A Cup of Coffee with TESOL Experts is
a video series that came from our passion of teaching online and connecting
with the greater world of teachers. We do this in the DOTP TESOL Certificate
Program. Our participants from that course can use the information to develop
their own passions in teaching with technology. Franco Cook completed the DOTP
certificate last year and designed a course on one of his passion
topics—helping Spanish-speaking students with their spoken English. According
to Franco:
The program helped me tap into what I
wanted to learn and wanted to teach. I wanted to become a better course
designer, developer, and facilitator in online, blended and mobile learning
environments. With the guidance and resources provided by my instructors, I was
able to create an online course on Canvas, my very own syllabus and materials,
and I got to pilot 1 week of the course with real students, on a topic I love!
Brenda Gonzalez is another former
DOTP participant from Bolivia. Brenda was featured on a video where we
discussed how to incorporate social-emotional learning into our online classes.
She shares,
I was very nervous because I had
never made a YouTube video. It was such a great experience, though. I loved
discussing the question with Diego and our guest from Voice of America Learning
English. I feel excited to share what I learned with others. I know there’s a
plethora of webinars and resources out there, but they’re not always fun,
teacher friendly, context appropriate, or research based.
A Cup of Coffee with TESOL
Experts hopes to become a safe online space where we can connect with people
from around the world. As teachers, we all need to share a lot more. Teaching
can be an incredibly isolating profession. There’s no doubt people are coming
up with very creative solutions for the challenges we face in this “new
normal.” However, it’s not always easy to communicate with one another and
without intending, we sometimes end up working in silos. Only by working
together and coordinating our recovery efforts will we be able to achieve
systemic changes that meet the needs of our teachers and students.
References
Dyment, J., Downing, J., &
Budd, Y. (2013). Framing teacher educator engagement in an online environment.Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 38(1). http://dx.doi.org/10.14221/ajte.2013v38n1.6
Kuh, G. D. (2009). The national
survey of student engagement: Conceptual and empirical foundations.New Directions for Institutional Research,141, 5–20.
Redmond, P., Heffernan, A., Abawi,
L., Brown, A., & Henderson, R. (2018). An online engagement framework
for higher education. Online Learning, 22(1), 183–204.
Trowler, V. (2010). Student
engagement literature review. The higher education academy,
11(1), 1–15.
Diego
Boada is an instructor for TESOL
International Association and a community manager for learning designers at
AULA Education. As a Fulbright scholar, Dr. Boada earned his MEd and PhD in
learning, design, and technology at the University of Georgia (UGA). He also
completed a postdoctoral fellowship in pedagogy for culturally and
linguistically diverse students at UGA’s Center for Latino Achievement and
Success in Education.
Dawn
Bikowski is an associate professor at the
Defense Language Institute in Monterey, CA. Her background is in applied
linguistics and educational technology, with research focusing on educational
technology, global education, and academic and professional communication. She
is the author of numerous journal articles and coauthor of the book Teaching with a Global Perspective: Practical Strategies from Course
Design to Assessment, as well as being a cocreator and long-term
instructor of TESOL International Association’s Developing an Online Teaching
Program.