The Student Voice
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The Student Voice
Too often in education we think we know what is best for our students. Not often enough do we listen and hear what our students are saying about their education. This collection tries to show more of the student perspective.
Curated by Peter Mellow
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Rescooped by Peter Mellow from Digital Learning - beyond eLearning and Blended Learning
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Why students do not turn on their video cameras during online classes and an equitable and inclusive plan to encourage them to do so

Why students do not turn on their video cameras during online classes and an equitable and inclusive plan to encourage them to do so | The Student Voice | Scoop.it
Enrollment in courses taught remotely in higher education has been on the rise, with a recent surge in response to a global pandemic. While adapting this form of teaching, instructors familiar with traditional face-to-face methods are now met with a new set of challenges, including students not turning on their cameras during synchronous class meetings held via videoconferencing. After transitioning to emergency remote instruction in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, our introductory biology course shifted all in-person laboratory sections into synchronous class meetings held via the Zoom videoconferencing program. Out of consideration for students, we established a policy that video camera use during class was optional, but encouraged. However, by the end of the semester, several of our instructors and students reported lower than desired camera use that diminished the educational experience. We surveyed students to better understand why they did not turn on their cameras. We confirmed several predicted reasons including the most frequently reported: being concerned about personal appearance. Other reasons included being concerned about other people and the physical location being seen in the background and having a weak internet connection, all of which our exploratory analyses suggest may disproportionately influence underrepresented minorities. Additionally, some students revealed to us that social norms also play a role in camera use. This information was used to develop strategies to encourage—without requiring—camera use while promoting equity and inclusion. Broadly, these strategies are to not require camera use, explicitly encourage usage while establishing norms, address potential distractions, engage students with active learning, and understand your students’ challenges through surveys. While the demographics and needs of students vary by course and institution, our recommendations will likely be directly helpful to many instructors and also serve as a model for gathering data to develop strategies more tailored for other student populations.
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Rescooped by Peter Mellow from Digital Learning - beyond eLearning and Blended Learning
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Study finds it beneficial to look at your webcam, not your monitor during Zoom calls and livestreams

Study finds it beneficial to look at your webcam, not your monitor during Zoom calls and livestreams | The Student Voice | Scoop.it
A recent study found that maintaining eye contact on your webcam will bring about positive feelings from your Zoom conference attendees.
Peter Mellow's curator insight, January 16, 2022 5:00 PM
Link thanks to @philroyNZ