This was the first year I have had to start the year 'meeting' some of my students online. New year, new school, new experience! Not only have the past two weeks been challenging because of teaching online to students who I have not met yet, this was only for some of my classes! South Australia decided to have Y7 and Y12 students face to face and the rest of students online. This meant I had to switch my energy levels and general 'vibe' much more frequently than usual. I found this super hard and mentally draining.
I had no clue where to begin trying to develop relationships across a screen. This wasn't something I had experienced before. I genuinely didn't realise how much easier it was to engage students and try to start discussion when I already knew them! Because Adelaide also has had few lockdown experiences, majority of students wouldn't turn their microphones on, let alone their cameras!
Naturally I turned to Twitter and got some great ideas as can be seen below. Andy Milne's post was also helpful to get me thinking and for some starting activities/resources. Finally, I reread through my previous posts tagged engagement to try and get some inspiration. My reflection after a webinar facilitated by The Education Hub reminded me of some key things to consider too.
For the first time I’m starting my year with some classes online learning. Looking for get to know you/relationship building activities for meeting kids! 🙏🏼🤞🏼 @carmelhealth @NicholasFerroni @ScottAmpersand and anyone else - any ideas?? 😬
— Georgia Dougherty (@_gmdougherty) February 1, 2022
A few things that I attempted over the last two weeks (from several people's suggestions) include the following;
- A survey to compare the things myself and students have in common
- Personality tests for students to discuss their character strengths and how they can be utilised in our classroom as well as the character qualities they would like to develop
- What 5 things in your home would you save to be stranded on an island and why, then a discussion around what each of these things and decisions mean for the group
- Projects that develop key skills students will need throughout the course such as technique breakdown or skill analysis using YouTube videos and designing their own camping trip
- Group contributions to shared spaces such as Google Jamboard
- Scenario based learning prompts and discussions
- Small group discussions for questions/queries/challenges (which I also do face to face to give student choice how they use their time)