Adaptations en ligne pour la gestion de la classe et du comportement

Découvrez des stratégies pour soutenir un comportement positif et favoriser une communauté de classe connectée tout en enseignant en ligne.

Adaptations en ligne pour la gestion de la classe et du comportement
  • Enseignement
  • Gestion de la classe et du comportement
  • //
  • Enseignement et apprentissage à distance

Adaptations en ligne pour la gestion de la classe et du comportement

Essayer

Définissez des attentes claires, collectives et cohérentes concernant les fonctionnalités en ligne telles que l'utilisation du chat, de la caméra, de la sourdine, etc.

Essayer

Nominate students and/or Classroom Professionals to play specific roles in online learning like monitoring the chat and leading the opening in live sessions, or responding to message boards and providing positive feedback on student work in asynchronous situations.

Préparation

La préparation peut vous aider, vous et vos élèves, à vous sentir prêts à réussir et peut aider à atténuer les problèmes de comportement qui surviendraient autrement.

Il existe de nombreux outils, plates-formes et formats utilisés pour les modèles d'enseignement virtuel et d'apprentissage à distance. Il est important de communiquer avec les professionnels de la classe pour comprendre les attentes de votre engagement à distance avec les étudiants, pour s'appuyer sur ce qui fonctionne déjà et pour avoir une conversation ouverte. Pour des ressources liées à la planification avec Classroom Professionals dans des scénarios de travail à distance, explorez notre GIVE Resource on Getting Started With Remote Work.

Que vous planifiez une leçon asynchrone (préenregistrée ou écrite) ou un atelier synchrone (en direct), il est important que vous preniez en compte la durée de la leçon. Établissez des délais courts et réalistes pendant le processus de planification.

  • Keep live sessions between 20 to 60 minutes. If the lesson will be longer than 30 minutes, build in at least one break to be off-screen, to stretch, go to the bathroom, get some water or materials. Younger students will need shorter sessions than older students.
  • Keep pre-recorded sessions under 10 minutes.

For a live class, give plenty of notice to students about the live class including the date and time. Send a reminder before class. Create an agenda and communicate any supplies expectations. Share the agenda, lesson plan, or any prep materials beforehand so they can be prepared for what is expected to happen. This could also be helpful to send after class as well, to reinforce what was explored or to provide options for students who couldn’t make the class. Plus, repetition is always helpful!

Engagement

For a live class, log in early to help troubleshoot any technical issues and get your classroom set up so that you’re ready to give a warm welcome to your students.

  • Accueillez les élèves par leur nom lorsqu'ils se connectent.
  • Ayez un brise-glace ou une tâche à faire au début du cours pendant que les élèves se connectent.
  • Try using features on Zoom and Google Meet such as the whiteboard, Jamboard, or polling for interactive engagement.

Nominate co-hosts (e.g., Teachers, students, Team Teaching Artist). Co-hosts can help support with tasks like monitoring the chat, muting/unmuting, admitting participants from the waiting room (if applicable), etc. Encourage students to lead activities or sections of the lesson like the opening or closing.

In synchronous or asynchronous lessons, having a structure with an opening, a closing, and repeated rituals is helpful and offers a moment of community-building and emotional check-ins so you can assess how students are doing.

Always offer options for choice and agency.

  • Ask students to rename themselves to what they want to be called or give them an added task with this (e.g., “one adjective to describe how you feel, and your name”).
  • Give them choices throughout, and use features like polling or the chat to do so and make it fun.
  • Send students on missions to get items or get up and do a task in the lesson.

Laissez du temps et faites des transitions claires, même dans l'espace numérique. Pour les leçons asynchrones, laissez des pauses pour les réponses aux questions de réflexion et prévoyez du temps pour les transitions. Pour les cours en direct, soyez explicite sur les transitions et donnez suffisamment de temps. Affichez une minuterie sur l'écran pour que les élèves sachent combien de temps il leur reste.

For asynchronous lessons, provide a way for students to get in touch and communicate with you that is comfortable for you and the school. For synchronous work, build check-ins into your class time and use opening rituals to offer students a moment to share how they are feeling or express themselves. Consider utilizing tools like chats, private chats, polls, whiteboards, Pear Deck, Flipgrid, Padlet, and breakout rooms. On platforms with breakout rooms, you can put each student in their own breakout room with an assignment, and have one-on-one time with each student.

Outils et gestion de la plateforme numérique

Virtual platform tools like mute, video on/off are the way in which we receive a lot of information about our students and are often ways in which we instinctively assess engagement. It is important to remember that students may be on mute or have their video on/off for a variety of reasons (e.g., something happening at home that they don’t want others to see/hear or a technical issue). Don’t make assumptions about students’ engagement solely based on the way in which they interact with functions like mute or video. Use of the chat, participation in polling, use of reactions, and return of assignments are also ways to see if students are engaged or able to participate. Follow up with the Classroom Professionals you are partnering with if you have questions about specific students.

The digital experience can be overstimulating for students. Some examples include:

  • switching between various visual settings;
  • screen sharing;
  • seeing multiple participants;
  • seeing a single speaker;
  • sound variations, harshness, or focus;
  • lots of visuals flying in and out of videos.

Tenez compte de votre espace et de l'effet qu'il peut avoir sur les élèves :

  • the light on your screen;
  • clutter or distracting items in your background.

Réfléchissez à la façon dont vous équilibrez les multiples modalités d'enseignement et d'expression et comment vous pouvez offrir des pauses sensorielles :

  • everyone turns their camera off;
  • everyone on mute for a breath;
  • everyone looks for a household item that makes them feel calm.

Communiquez ouvertement sur ces fonctions au début de votre résidence (et soyez flexible avec elles).

  • If there are times when the full group is muted, explain and contextualize why, and try to build in moments where students can share their voice later. 
  • Encouragez le libre arbitre (demandez aux élèves de se mettre en sourdine au lieu de les contrôler).
  • Transparency: “I am hearing a loud sound, I am going to put you on mute, [name of student].” 
  • Encouragez l'engagement par d'autres moyens comme le chat ou la fonction de sondage. 
  • You can support students in using these functions if they are not able to do so themselves (e.g., turn camera on/off for them). 
  • Use verbal and nonverbal cues just like you would in a typical classroom. Create cues for the digital cues (e.g., mute/unmute) or use those that work for you in other settings. Create cues for participation/interaction (hand up in camera, reaction buttons, make up your own cue). Students can also help create these cues with you to instill a sense of investment and ownership.

  • Muting all students can be a very easy and streamlined way to eliminate noise, but it also cuts off a student’s ability to express and connect with others. Be mindful of how and why you are using mute.  
  • Turning off the chat can also limit chatter but can again feel like you have cut off a student’s ability to express themselves and connect with others. 
  • Faire un Contrôle d'accès at the top of the live class and throughout to see if needs are being met, including audio, video, and other needs. Make sure you do it verbally and in the chat.

pleine conscience

Consider starting each class with a ritual or moment of movement/stretching and mental health check-ins.

  • Mental/personal check-in (e.g., “Using your thumbs, show me how you’re feeling today. Thumbs up, down, middle, two thumbs-up, etc.).
  • Utilisez un sondage pour vérifier avec les étudiants.
  • Have students type in the chat words, emojis, or colors to describe how they’re feeling.

  • Create moments for students and caregivers to experience mindfulness together. You can create guided mindfulness meditations that both caregiver and child can listen to live or pre-recorded, or provide partner stretches for the caregiver and their child to do together.
  • Utilize or encourage use of free apps (e.g., Stop, Breathe & Think, 10% Happier, Headspace, Smiling Mind).
  • Invitez les élèves à fermer les yeux ou à éteindre leur appareil photo.