City University London. (2016). Online Facilitation Techniques
Techniques to foster engagement in discussion forums
- Post the first question to break the ice.
- Ask questions that are more straightforward to start with. Sometimes this can help students become comfortable with responding in an online setting.
- Use warm and friendly language tone to create a ‘low-risk’ environment.
- Introduce team work to foster sense of community.
- Encourage participants to evaluate not just their own but their peers contributions to promote a learner-centred approach.
- Create focus by offering short term goals and provide constructive feedback.
- Craft online discussion questions, not essay topics. Examples include probing into case studies, discussing controversial statements and applying principles/theories in new scenarios.
- Build the discussion by asking participants to expand on their responses based on their particular situations, needs, interests, and abilities.
- Respond to students’ posts within a consistent and reasonable time frame so that students are aware of your presence and active participation.
- Summarise ideas and conversations in order to refocus discussions, remind students of their learning journey, and imprint new information and knowledge.
- Moderate when there are negative influences, such as bad netiquette, non-contributions and monopolies.
- Consider assigning a grade for participation, or making use of the Activity Completion setting to restrict access to future learning resources on the condition of completion.
- Archive outdated discussion, for example by setting expiration date in order to provide a focus to the live discussion boards.
(City University London - CC BY SA)
Last modified: Thursday, 14 July 2016, 9:17 AM