Class activities which require students to participate, and have specific requirements about how they participate, e.g., students do not have full agency over what they say, do, or write. These activities may be assigned a grade for quality of student work.
Published in Chapter:
Reconsidering Teacher Presence and Community Building in an Online ESOL College Composition Course During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Mark A. McGuire (The Ohio State University, USA), Zhenjie Weng (The Ohio State University, USA), and Karen P. Macbeth (The Ohio State University, USA)
Copyright: © 2022
|Pages: 18
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-7720-2.ch018
Abstract
The pandemic of 2019 exposed considerable weaknesses in how teachers were present and communities were built in asynchronous, international, online ESOL composition classrooms. Although teachers put more time into their courses, students still felt disconnected from their educational experience. This study, through student surveys and teacher reflections, followed two teachers who devised innovative solutions to actively do “being present” as teachers and to thereby more compellingly draw students into the community-building process despite the limitations of the online space amidst an international crisis. Included are recommendations about specific ways to challenge traditional online instructional methods, to allow and promote student agency through unstructured and semi-structured activities, to create connections via strategic vulnerability, and more. Also discussed are key concepts for future research and general conclusions about the need for such teacher adaptability and the lessons from it, both for during the pandemic and beyond it.