online teaching tips
Assessment, Best Practices

Tips for Giving Online Quizzes/Tests

Let’s be clear, with ANY quiz, test, or exam there is a chance a student will cheat, even in a face to face class.  But the temptation is often greater in an online class because there is no one watching.  So I have done some research and come up with some tips to help you when setting up your online quizzes and test.

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Tip 1: Set Expectations With Student

Before your first online quiz/test/exam make sure you set your expectations.  Online may be new to some students and they may not realize that the same rules apply.  Be clear what they CAN and CANNOT use during the test, including phones, texts, other people, books, or the internet. I know it seems obvious but it’s better to be clear up front so there are not misunderstandings.

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Tip 2: Start with the Honor Code

Make the first question in your quiz/test/exam an honor code question.

  1. Choose a multiple choice question type.
  2. Paste the Honor Code text into question body.
  3. In the first answer option type in “I understand that the CofC Honor code applies to this test and I will abide by it.
  4. Mark it as correct and delete all other answer options by clicking the “X” next to each.

This is just one last way to make sure the students understand the honor code applies.  It removes any gray areas.

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Tip 3: Randomize

OAKS allows you to randomize both the ANSWERS when you create the question and the QUESTIONS within the quiz.

Randomize Questions

If you want your assessment questions to be just in different orders for each student, then click on the Shuffle questions at the quiz level box in the Quiz Questions link when editing/creating a quiz.  This will take all the questions you have added and just rearrange them for each student.

If you have a test bank and want only a specific amount of those questions to be randomly distributed (example I have 70 questions and I want the computer to randomly deliver 50 questions to each student), you will have to use a Question Pool.  To learn more visit the Brightspace Help area on Question Pools.

Randomize Answers

If you want your answers in multiple choice questions to be randomized (example: my letter A is different than my friend’s letter A for this question) then, when creating the question, click on the Randomize Answers box under the answer options you’ve typed in.

Do not use this feature on True/False questions or questions who’s answers include: All of the above, None of the above, A and C, etc.

mc test

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Tip 4: Set your Timing Properly

Time to Take the Test

Timing controls how long a user has to complete the quiz/test/exam once they click on the Start button.  Note: if they leave the quiz and come back in the clock continues to run while they are gone.

Don’t give them too much time to take the assessment.  Research shows that you should allow 45 seconds per multiple choice question/TF questions unless they are particularly long.  Another recommendation I read was for you to take the assessment then double the time it took you.  Either way, be purposeful when setting your times.

Start and End Time

You can set up the START time using the Start/End/Due features.  This date/time restriction determines when a student can begin taking the test. This means that if a 60 minute test closes at noon, a student can still begin taking the test at 11:59 am. and still take their full 60 minutes, meaning they end their test at 12:59 pm.It isn’t recommended to leave a D2L Quiz open for long periods of time.  Be thoughtful about how long you allow between the start time of the test and the end time.

lightbulbTip 5: Limit Your Feedback

When a student completes a quiz/test/exam, by default, they are shown their score if the test is auto-graded but that’s all.  They don’t see what they got right, wrong, or the correct answers.  In OAKS you can set up an additional views that allow the students to see this information and set that additional view to release on a specific date/time.  Take your END date/time and add the total minutes that a student can take a test and release the additional view AFTER this time.   For example: my test ends 3/19 at 5:00 pm and the students have 120 minutes to take the test.  I will release the additional view 3/19 at 7:00.  That’s because a student can begin taking the test at 4:59 and can still be taking the test at 6:59.

  1. When creating or editing a quiz, click on the Submission View tab
  2. Click on Add Additional View.
  3. Give the submission view a name and then choose the settings you want.
  4. Under View Restrictions set your date/time to release this view.
  5. Click Save.

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Tip 6: Deliver one question at a time

Setting OAKS Quizzes to deliver one question at a time makes it harder for students to take a screenshot of your test or print the screen.  The students see only one question and once they answer it they click Next to get to the next question.

  1. When creating/editing a quiz, scroll to the Quiz Questions area.
  2. Next to Questions per page, type in 1 and Apply
  3. If you want to prevent them from going back to previous questions, including ones they skipped, check the box next to Prevent moving backwards through pages.

Please do not select “Prevent moving backwards through pages.”  This makes the test difficult for individuals with accommodations and goes against everything students are taught about timed test taking, which is to pass up questions they don’t know and come back to them later.

Be prepared
Best Practices, Distance Ed, Innovative Instruction, Pedagogy

BE PREPARED FOR FALL! IT’S NOT JUST THE SCOUT’S MOTTO, IT SHOULD BE YOURS AS WELL

TLT is excited to share a couple of announcements with you that we hope will serve as resources as you continue to prepare your courses for the fall semester.

RESILIENT TEACHING SITE

As was shared with faculty in June (attached), the Resilient Teaching Task Force defined nine teaching approaches that you should consider for the fall semester. While there are nine definitions, you will find similarities between them. Choosing the one that suits you best will be determined by factors specific to you and your students. We hope this site will help you implement the approach that fits you best and provides resources for you to plan and prepare your courses and communicate with your students.

Please visit the Resilient Teaching site at, https://tlt.cofc.edu/resilient-teaching-and-learning/.

Note: As you will find plastered throughout the site, please have a plan in place in case one or more of your students has to quarantine, and also don’t forget that the last week of the semesters, and final exams, will be fully online.

 

FACULTY DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES

In addition to the new site, TLT will be offering a plethora of forums and development opportunities, centered around the resilient teaching approaches. These sessions will begin next week, Wednesday, July 29th and run through Friday, August 21st, with a handful of sessions being offered each day. The open forum sessions are meant for you and your colleagues to get together to ask questions and discuss different teaching approaches which we hope will spawn new ideas and inspiration. In addition, many more sessions will be offered to provide you with ideas, strategies, and tips and tricks, as well as supplemental technology tools to help you facilitate your courses. To view the sessions and to register, please visit, http://tlthd.eventbrite.com

online teaching tips
Best Practices, Distance Ed

Online Teaching Tip: Use Intelligent Agents to Keep Students Engaged and On Task

Keeping Students On Track and Engaged

In an online class, it’s often hard to keep students on track, especially students who aren’t used to taking this type of course.  If you use OAKS you can use the Intelligent Agents to help you help your students.

Intelligent Agents in OAKS

Intelligent Agents (IAs) will automatically send an email to students based on an action, or lack of action.

Uses:

  • The easiest, and most helpful, thing to do with IAs is to remind students to log into the class.  With this IA, an email goes out when a student hasn’t had any course activity in X number of days (you choose).
  • Have the IA email students who have not yet turned in an assignment or taken a quiz to remind them to get it done.
  • We often focus on students who are not doing well, but it’s just as important to focus on those students who are.  Have the IA send a congratulations email or graphic to any student who gets a good grade (defined by you) on a quiz, assignment or discussion.  This is an amazing way to keep students engaged.

NOTE:  Unfortunately, at this time IAs only work with email and cannot send notifications via text.

How To:

  1. In your OAKS class go to Management > Edit Course > Intelligent Agents
  2. Select the New button
  3. Type in a Name for your IA in Agent Name
  4. Make sure the Agent is Enabled is checked
  5. Section 1: Criteria
    1. Choose the group whom you want to be eligible for the email.
    2. If you want to have them reminded to log into the class then check the box next to Course Activity, Take action… and then select the proper button.
    3. If you want to email the student when they have or have not done something in the class click on Create and Attach under Release Conditions (Learn more at https://youtu.be/pa2NaVsodRA.  This video shows Release Conditions in Content but they work the same way throughout the class)
  6. Section 2: Actions
    1. Determine if they should get an email every time it happens (like when they don’t login within a certain number of days) or only the first time (as when they get a specific grade on a quiz).
    2. Then write the email.
      1. In To: Cc: Bcc: click on What special email addresses can I use? to show you filler text you can use to have the email automatically send to the proper person.
      2. In the Subject and Body you can also use these replacement strings to personalize the email.  Click on What replace strings can I use in the subject and message? to see these.
  7. Section 3: Scheduling
    1. Click the check box next to Use Schedule
    2. Now set the schedule parameters.
  8. Click Save and Close

 

The IAs are a great way to keep up with students without over taxing yourself.

Student Focused SLOs
Assessment, Best Practices, Pedagogy

Writing Student Learning Outcomes

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What is the purpose of Student Learning Outcomes?

SLOs help us, faculty/program/ department/school, to determine and define what we want the learners to be able to DO, KNOW, & VALUE as a result of taking the course AND helps us design, evaluate and redesign the instruction for the future.  These SLOs are an important component of course creation.

SLOs should be: 

  • Student focused
  • Measurable and Observable
  • Contain a verb from the upper levels of the Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy

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What do students really need to get out of your class?

When writing an SLO, one of the most difficult parts is making them measurable.  The first step in this process is to

identify what the student NEEDS to know/value/be able to do.

 Stay focused on the knowledge or skills they will need to retain to be successful in later classes, in the profession, and/or in life.

“I want students to …”

I want teacher candidates to …”

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How to write an SLO

Step 1:  What do students really need to get out of this class? (know, do, value)

Step 2:  What performances, if achieved, would cause you to agree that students know it, can do it, or value it?

Step 3:  For each performance, describe the quality or quantity you will consider acceptable to show they have achieved it.

Step 4:  Test your performances.  Ask yourself, if a student completed exactly what is outlined in Step 2 & 3, would I consider them to have completed the outcome listed  in Step 1?

Step 5: Write S.M.A.R.T.  Learning Outcomes (SLOs)

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SMART outcomes are set with the purpose of increasing student achievement. They are specific in that they clarify precisely what students should learn, the level of the learning (proficiency level), the assessments that will be used to make the proficiency determination and a time frame. A SMART Outcome is:

Specific ‐ A specific SLO has a much greater chance of being accomplished than a general one. To set a specific outcome you must answer the “W” questions:

  • Who: Who is involved? 
  • What: What do I want to accomplish? (USE BLOOM’S VERBS!)
  • When: Establish a time frame. 
  • Which: Identify requirements and constraints. 
  • Why: Specific reasons, purpose or benefits of accomplishing the outcome. 

from UMass Dartmouth http://www.umassd.edu/fycm/goalsetting/resources/smartgoals/

Measurable  ‐ Student success is measured by assessment.  It answers the question – HOW, How much? How many?  The criteria should be concrete and geared toward measuring progress. 

Answer the question, “How will I know they’ve accomplished what I expect them to in this course?”

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Attainable but Aggressive ‐ The outcome should be set high but within reason.  High outcomes are not always attained but that does not mean it was a failure.  

Results Oriented/Relevant  ‐ Results tell you who has achieved proficiency.  These results determine which students need remediation or enrichment.  Relevant allows you to narrow the outcomes into those that are most important instead of trying measure everything in the course which can often happen.  

Time Bound – All outcomes are bound by a clearly‐defined time frame.  Setting a time lends a sense of urgency and allows you benchmarks by which you can examine your data and make relevant changes to move you and your students toward the final outcome.

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Examples of SLOs 

MODEL:  As a result of WHATWHO will be able to ACTION VERB + DEFINED BY EXPLICIT AND OBSERVABLE TERMS.

As a result of PARTICIPATING IN THIS EXSC 315, STUDENTS will be able to ANALYZE AND SUMMARIZE a research study as using concise and non-judgemental language.  

As a result of passing TEDU 201, the student will be able to debate major political and economic issues that have influenced policy decisions in education as determined by federal, state, and local agencies.

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Small Teaching Tip 21: It's Time for a Syllabus Redesign
Best Practices, Small Teaching Tip, Teaching Advice, Web 2.0

Small Teaching Tip #21: It’s Time for a Syllabus Redesign

If you’re like most faculty, you receive an inordinate number of questions from students that they could have easily answered themselves if they only consulted the syllabus.  For years, I’ve pondered the question: why don’t students read the syllabus?  The answer I’ve come up with after a lot of research and talking with students is that syllabi are boring. Yep, I suggest it’s as simple as that.  As I’ve written about before, syllabi tend to feel cold and sterile like those Terms of Service agreements no one actually reads. In addition, their format hasn’t changed much in the past twenty years to reflect the amazing technological advancements in graphic design and information transmission.  Should it truly surprise us that students avoid reading these inhospitable documents?

In other blog posts, I’ve suggested ways to make your syllabus more welcoming, engaging, and learner-centered.  Today, I’d like to offer two tips specifically regarding the format of your syllabus.

Construct Your Syllabus Like an FAQ

Students likely ask you the same questions from one semester to the next:  Do you accept late work? What is your attendance policy? Can I buy the textbook used or a previous edition? How am I going to be graded? Can I take the final exam early so I can leave campus sooner?  If you’ve been paying attention to these repeat questions, you’ve already compiled a list of FAQs (frequently asked questions) that students seem to care the most about. To encourage students to locate answers themselves, make the information as accessible as possible.  Organize your syllabus into distinct segments with very clear headings so students can scan the pages and quickly find what they’re looking for.  You can also make your syllabus more reader-friendly by using bulleted or numbered lists and constructing shorter paragraphs. These organizational features create greater white space, which is easier on the eyes, and also makes the text seem less dense and, therefore, less intimidating.

Create a Digital Version of Your Syllabus

Rather than presenting students with a Word document or PDF, consider creating a digital version of your syllabus. What do I mean by “digital”?  I’m referring to creating your syllabus using a Web 2.0 application and hosting it online.  For example, creating your syllabus using Google Docs, Google Slides, Populr, WordPress, or Piktochart.

There are numerous reasons to create a digital syllabus.  First, it transforms a traditionally static document into a dynamic and responsive experience.  You can embed links to web pages, documents, or videos, allowing you to share more information while preventing “syllabus bloat.”  Secondly, using an online tool makes it easier to “spice up” your syllabus with color and graphics (such as memes and gifs) which make your syllabus more inviting to students.  Third, a digital syllabus is likely more mobile-friendly than a Word document or PDF.  Most students want to access your syllabus (and other course materials) on their phones but relying on tools designed to create print materials often do not display well on mobile devices.  Finally, the fourth reason to create a digital syllabus is that it is easily shareable.  You can post the link to your syllabus just about anywhere — in an email, on your department’s webpage, on your own professional webpage or blog, and even on your department’s social media accounts to encourage greater visibility which could increase enrollments.

An Important Note About Accessibility

If you decide to experiment with digital syllabi, it’s important to keep accessibility in mind.  You want to ensure all students can consume the information contained in your syllabus regardless of ability.  For example, if you include images in your syllabus, you should also add “alt text” that describes the image so screen readers can detect that information and relate it to the user. I recommend keeping on hand the old version of your syllabus, which is completely text-based, in case you have a student who is visually impaired. If you are unfamiliar with screen reading software or the specific needs of our students with disabilities, I encourage you to reach out to the folks in Disability Services.

Now that I’ve convinced you to create a digital syllabus, check out these examples for inspiration:

Want to learn more?  If you are a graduate of the Distance Education Readiness Course, you can participate in the Distance Education Extension Program and access the “Crafting a Learner-Centered Syllabus” mini-course. If you haven’t taken the DE Readiness Course yet and want to know more, please visit http://blogs.charleston.edu/dereadiness/

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Assessment, Best Practices, Pedagogy

Top 5 Tips To Get Students To Read Your Feedback

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WHY WON’T STUDENTS READ/USE THE FEEDBACK I GIVE?

A complaint I hear over and over again from faculty is “What can I do to make my students read and use the feedback I give them?”  Faculty and teachers spend so much time giving detailed feedback and notes on assignments only to find the returned work in the trash.  That’s because, to the students, the assignment is OVER.  They look at the assignment long enough to find out their grade then they are done.  To them, that assignment (and learning) is over and in the can, along with the graded assessment.

 

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SO WHAT CAN YOU DO?

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The most important thing is to determine WHY you are giving feedback.  

Is it to justify the grade you’ve given or to cover your hide (grade-centered approach) or is for the students to improve and learn (learning-centered approach).  Both are fine, but Grade-centered normally focuses retrospectively on the errors made and what was wrong with the assessment and therefore, a student is never going to read that or take anything away from that type of feedback.  Learning-centered feedback focuses on suggestions for future practice.  The other issue is that, even if we are giving future practice comments on a completed assignment, many times the student won’t need to apply that feedback until the next assessment which can be some time in the future.  By that time the feedback is out of the student’s mind.

Learning-centered feedback (formative) should be given DURING the assessment and the students should use it to BETTER their final assessment (summative).  During this process, the intense reading and markup is done at the formative stage.  For the final assessment, you, as the instructor, just read it and grade it.

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In my research on this subject everyone seems to say the same thing over and over again.  The #1 way to get students to read their feedback is to

DELAY THE GRADE!

Whether is a draft or a final assignment, when you return them only give the feedback.  Don’t include a rubric or a checklist or grades.  Students are more likely to read the comments to try to discern their grade.  You will then release the grade at a later time.

This is only one method below are more you can try.

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Top 5 Strategies to Get Students to Read and Use Feedback

  1. Don’t provide a grade with your feedback.
    No rubrics, no checklists, no grades.  Only you’re commented feedback.   
     
  2. Explain the purpose of the feedback 
    Why do you give feedback and what is your expectation of them to read and use the feedback?  When they know why or how you expect them to use it they are more likely to read it.
     
  3. Build a connection from the feedback to the revision.
    Have the students read the feedback and make three observations and two questions based on your feedback.  You could also have them make the changes in the final assessment then write a brief paper of how using the feedback improved the final assessment or what they changed as a result of the feedback and what they learned from those changes.  You are basically requiring them to read and use the feedback as part of the process.
     
  4. Use a mix of feedback styles
    Try different feedback forms on different assignments such as text, audio, video, in person, interviews.  Mixing it up keeps the students on their toes.
     
  5. Prevent feedback overload.
    Don’t mark up every tiny thing that is wrong with a paper.  Focus on the most important things you want your students to glean and improve from your feedback (2-3 things) and mark only those.  Try the Sandwich technique: compliment; changes; compliment.

    If you’re giving multiple assignments where feedback will be given then consider scaffolding your method.  The first assignment, give the feedback but teach your students how to revise their work based on that feedback.  Then move to a place where you are leaving them on their own to fix it.  This is particularly important for younger students and college freshmen.

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Strengths in 60
Best Practices

Strengths in 60! Strengths Deck

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Tips and Tools for Teaching and Student Success with Clifton Strengths.

This is a new series designed to help instructors and departments on campus incorporate a Clifton Strengths activity in 60 seconds or 60 minutes.  Each strategy provides an opportunity for you and your students or team members to use strengths every day and to create “Moments That Matter” around strengths in the classroom. These strengths teaching and learning strategies are organized as opportunities for engagement, creative applications, assessments, and recognition. Have fun.

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Strengths Deck

Ask students or team members to fill out a 3×5 card with their name (as they would like to be called in the class) on one side of the card. Ask students to include their Top 5 Signature Themes (or strengths) on the other side of the card. Ask students to note the strength(s) they think will serve them most during your class.This activity does several things:

  • First, it provides a classroom name and strengths deck for you.
  • Second, it requires students to know and link their strengths to your class.
  • And finally, it provides opportunities for future conversations as students’ understanding of their strengths and class content evolve.

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By Idahlynn Karre Copyright © 2008 Gallup, Inc. All rights reserved. Gallup®, Clifton StrengthsFinder®, and StrengthsQuest™ are trademarks of Gallup, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners

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Become a teaching superhero
Assessment, Best Practices, Collaboration, Distance Ed, Pedagogy

BECOME A TEACHING SUPERHERO WITH TLThd’S CLASS OBSERVATIONS

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TLThd is launching a new service to all instructors at CofC…CLASS OBSERVATIONS

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These observations can be for your face-to-face or your online classes.  An instructional technologist will come to your class (or review your OAKS online class) and observe you and your students.  At the end of the observation we will provide you with a full report of everything that occurred during the class.  You can then use that information however you see fit! The important thing to remember is that this is just for you, no one else. We don’t mention it to your Chairs, Dean, or Colleagues nor will we conduct an observation at the request of anyone else. The only purpose of the observation is to give you the data to allow you to reflect on your teaching and your student interaction.

Currently we are offering In-class, Videotaped, and Student Focus Group observations for the face-to-face classes and a Module Review in the online classes.  We hope to expand our online offerings in December. 

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Small Teaching Tip 19: Creating a More Engaging and Effective First Day of Class
Best Practices, Small Teaching Tip, Teaching Advice

Small Teaching Tip #19: Creating a More Engaging and Effective First Day of Class

Over the years, I’ve written a few blog posts about using the first day of class more effectively.  But since it’s been a while and a new semester is upon us, I thought I’d revisit this topic. So here are a few ideas to spice up that first day (or first week) of class:

Don’t let students go after five minutes

What’s the point of meeting if nothing is going to be accomplished the first day?  I used to think students would perceive me as “cool” if I let them go after only a couple minutes.  Not so.  Most students felt their time was completely wasted.  Put yourself in their shoes.  If you were asked by a colleague to come to campus for a meeting then, after just a couple minutes, they said “Eh, let’s just continue this conversation later,” you’d likely be frustrated.  Take advantage of the opportunities the first day presents to build connections and start forming a supportive learning environment.

Don’t make the first day of class “Syllabus Day”

Avoid reading the entire syllabus to students.  This is a waste of everyone’s time.  Students who care about their learning will read the syllabus on their own.  If you’re wary of putting that onus on students, ask them to sign a syllabus contract or include a syllabus quiz the first week (which is very easy to accomplish using the OAKS quizzing tool).  Perhaps more importantly, write a syllabus that students might want to read rather than one that looks like a Terms of Service agreement.  David Gooblar, lecturer at the University of Iowa, wrote about this in Chronicle Vitae: “Your Syllabus Doesn’t Have to Look Like a Contract.”  If interested, this rubric (bit.do/syllabusrubric) may help you critically examine your syllabi.

Introduce yourself as a human being

If students are so inclined, they can look up your bio on the department’s webpage.  They can Google you.  So instead of telling your academic story, consider telling a more personal story.  Share your hobbies and passions or something students would never guess based on their first impressions of you.  This is more than being personable; it’s about being authentic.  When I introduce myself to the class, I share quirks and pet peeves.  These usually get a chuckle and make me seem like a human being rather than a lecturing and grading robot.  I once had a professor who played a piece of music he wrote as a way to introduce himself.  I still remember him vividly 12 years later.

Establish intentions

Rather than spending time listing policy after policy, consider setting intentions for the semester and involving your students in this process.  What do you hope they accomplish and what do they want to learn?  What do you expect from them and what can they expect from you?  Is there a way both parties can be satisfied?  Here are some ideas I have tried in my own classes:

  • Ask students to think about their favorite classes and the classes they hated.  Then (without revealing identifiable characteristics), ask them to generate lists of qualities that made the classes awesome or terrible.  Students love this activity and it always results in a fruitful discussion of expectations.  It also provides fantastic insight into the minds of both students and professors, which leads to better understanding and empathy.
  • I also ask students to compile a list of what they would like from me.  Punctuality, availability, and fairness are usually mentioned and these are qualities that I already deem important.  But because students composed the list themselves, it gives them the sense that I’m willing to share my power and that I’m open to their perspectives.
  • Consider establishing a classroom code of conduct.  Some of you may find this infantile, but I believe it’s one of the best and easiest ways to establish a respectful classroom culture.  When students generate the rules, they’re more likely to own them.

Focus the first class on making connections instead of giving directions

Rather than spending 50 or 75 minutes telling students what they can and cannot do in your class, spend time getting to know one another.  That first day tells students a lot about who you are and what kind of teacher you will be.  If you spend it giving them “do’s and don’ts” they won’t learn much about you except you like rules.  According to Joe Kreizinger from Northwest Missouri State University, focus the first class on:

  • connecting students to instructor: put your teaching philosophy into student-friendly language and explain how you approach classroom management and student learning.
  • connecting students to content: explain why this class matters and how it applies to your students’ current and future lives.
  • connecting instructor to content: tell students the story of how you discovered your discipline.  How did you know it was the field for you?
  • connecting students to students: icebreakers can be corny, but they are also effective at forcing students to talk to one another rather than stare at their cell phones.

Build icebreakers into the entire first week, even beyond

Most professors include some type of “getting to know you” activity on the first day.  But the class roster doesn’t solidify until after the add/drop deadline. Therefore, I suggest icebreakers are even more important during the third and fourth class periods.  This doesn’t have to take much time.  I typically incorporate self-introductions into roll call, asking students silly questions to make them chuckle.  I’m consistently surprised by the number of times students find unexpected connections: “Seamus Finnigan is my favorite Harry Potter character too!!!”  Some students may be grumpy about icebreakers, which is understandable considering they do them in every class, but that encourages me to find new ones each semester.  For example, I’ve had them do “speed dating,” play 6 degrees of separation, and go on scavenger hunts.  There are so many possibilities!  Google “icebreakers that aren’t lame” or ask your colleagues how they facilitate introductions.

Showcase course content

Some of you may disagree with me on this point as well, but sometimes we have to convince students to buy what we’re selling.  The first day is all about introductions and the course content should be included.  But rather than provide a regurgitation of the course catalog description, pitch the course as something students will find exciting and, yes, applicable to their lives.  And just as important, tell students why this is content you love and why this is a course you want to teach.  Enthusiasm is contagious.  I also recommend you start teaching the first day.  Students may look at you with incredulity, but it communicates that you take the course and their learning seriously.  In contrast, if you let them go after ten minutes, it communicates the course isn’t important.  So use this time to jump in and provide an outline of the fantastic content you’ll be sharing.

The first day of class is ripe with possibilities. Make the most of it and it will set you up for a successful and enjoyable semester!