Support For Learners Participation
Support For Learners Participation
Support For Learners Participation
Classroom participation is a feature of many course designs. It can result in insightful comments
and interesting connections being made by students, and can foster a high level of energy and
enthusiasm in the classroom learning environment. However, poorly managed participation can
also lead to instructor frustration and student confusion. Below are strategies to consider using to
make your classroom participation more effective.
• Be clear with your definition and intention. Participation is often equated with
discussion, which typically involves a lengthy conversation with the whole class.
However, participation can also include short exchanges between instructors and
students, or within small groups of students. If you include participation in your roster of
assessments, you need to clearly communicate to your students what it will entail and
why you are including a participation component. Do see participation as the outcome of
student preparation? Are you interested in the quality of contributions or quantity? Does
participation enable students to take risks and make errors as part of their learning? Does
it increase their exposure to other ways of thinking? Does it enable them to demonstrate
and develop their communication skills? Is it possible for a student to participate too
much?
• Seek consensus. While you can independently prepare a rubric that explains how you
will assess participation, you may find that students will participate more enthusiastically
if you ask them to help define what constitutes effective participation and then ask them
to develop a rubric with you. Bean & Peterson (1998) suggest asking students to identify
features of effective discussions they have experienced in the past, including the
behaviours and roles of both the students and the instructor.
• Keep written records. You need to develop a system that works for you. Some
instructors use class pictures, name tents, seating charts, or attendance lists to keep track
of student names so they can record participation each class. Teaching assistants may be
needed to help record students’ contributions if your class is large. In these large classes,
it may be necessary to ask students to state their name before making their comment so
that participation can be accurately recorded. A simple check mark system (one check for
good contributions and two for outstanding ones) can be enough to record evidence of
students’ contributions. Such a system can be complemented by having students record
their own contributions for submission after every class or as an aggregate every few
weeks. Regardless of the system that you choose, you need one that is efficient so that the
process of assessing student participation does not become too onerous for you or the
students.
• Consider the students’ self-assessments. You should provide your own written
feedback on their self-assessments. You may also want to meet individually with students
whose self-assessment of their participation differs markedly from your assessment.
• Use peer evaluation. In small classes, where students know one another's names, it is
feasible to ask each student to evaluate the participation of everyone in the class; doing so
not only gives you, the instructor, useful information, but also encourages each student to
consider his or her participation in the context of the class as a whole. Even in large
classes, students can reasonably be expected to assess the participation of classmates with
whom they have worked closely, for example, in a small group or group-project setting.
Having a clear rubric helps students make these peer assessments in an objective .