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Do you find it difficult to establish a sense of community or belonging with your students? Your presence as a teacher, especially when you teach online, not only impacts how much your students feel included in your subject – it impacts how well they learn.
A welcome message can help students familiarise themselves with the subject coordinator, establish a social connection early in the academic session, and understand preferred methods of communication with you and other students.
When building a welcome message for a subject, we recommend using a video format so students can see and hear their teaching team.
Keep the video ideally less than 2 minutes, but no more than 5 minutes. The goal for your welcome video should not be to explain the subject to students; leave that for the subject outline and your first class. Keeping the video short will also help with engagement.
Instead, your goal should be to give your students an idea of what you look like, how you sound and what your personality is like. With that in mind, try to be specific and conversational. Students tend to enjoy more informal videos.
Briefly introduce yourself and your academic and professional background, keeping it to 1-2 sentences. Students need to know who will be managing their subject and the expertise of the teaching team. This can include talking about your qualifications (e.g. academic degrees), work experience, projects, publications and other achievements. Emphasising this area for students can lead to improved student-teacher relationships.
Briefly explain what the subject is about and provide students with a quick overview of the main topics that will be covered during the academic session.
Link past and future by explaining to students what previous knowledge they need to review for this subject and where this subject will take them. This helps students logically construct their knowledge.
Clarify to students their responsibilities (e.g. assessments, attendance, etc.) so they know how to succeed in the subject and achieve the anticipated learning outcomes.
Establish a key value of the subject by emphasising the importance of the subject in their professional career.
This short template incorporates all these elements and shapes them into a script for you.
Explain whether there is preparation work for Week 1, or anything students need to do (e.g. read the intro to Module 1).
The following technologies are tools supported by UTS:
If you would like to experiment, try the following tools (please note, they are not officially supported by UTS):
This activity is suitable at the beginning of the session (in the Get Started module), for the following types of subjects:
BUILD | TEACH | LEARN |
---|---|---|
30 mins | 30 mins | 3-6 mins* |
* The learning time is based on the video content.
Welcome messages in online learning environments help students get to know their teaching team before the session even commences. The video format is recommended as it provides a more personal approach, creating a better opportunity for engaging students and making an early connection. The significance of the online social presence of a teaching team in improving the learning experience has frequently been reported (Richardson & Lowenthal, 2017).
Lee (2014) states that social presence correlates with successful learning outcomes. Social presence is defined as ‘the ability of learners to project themselves socially and effectively into a community of inquiry’ (Rourke, Anderson, Garrison & Archer, 2007). Social presence supports cognitive objectives through the ability to instigate, sustain and support critical thinking in a community of learners, and is linked to the ability of learners to construct and confirm meaning through sustained reflection and discourse. However, it remains the teacher’s responsibility to establish and mediate social presence to optimise the learning experience and sustain the learning environment.
Best practice in subject site design is to include an introduction that humanise the online experience for your students. You can help students realise that their teacher is a real person with enthusiasm for the subject matter and expertise in profession, teaching and/or research.
Fatayer, M. (2019). ‘Welcome to subject video’ in Adaptable Resources for Teaching with Technology, LX.lab, Institute for Interactive Media & Learning, University of Technology, Sydney. Retrieved from: https://lx.uts.edu.au/resources/welcome to subject video/
The Adaptable Resources for Teaching with Technology collection by LX.lab, Institute for Interactive Media & Learning, University of Technology, Sydney are provided as open educational resources under
a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License
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