Teaching with Technology

Learning beyond the Classroom with WhatsApp

The learning management system (LMS) has long been the unified platform for hosting all content and activities in an online class. While it has served its purpose well, the advent of social media has exposed its limitations. Students find the multiple steps required to log

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Big Changes at Flipgrid

Flipgrid is a popular video-based discussion tool that has many advantages over an LMS discussion forum. For one, it arranges student postings on a single page rather than in a threaded forum. This makes it good for collecting a variety of independent responses to a

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Contract Cheating—and What to Do about It

Contract cheating is a relatively new phenomenon that is gaining attention in higher education because it is particularly difficult to detect. Instead of purchasing a paper from an outside source, contract cheating involves hiring someone specifically to create that work for the student. The problem

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Strategies for Using Flipgrid to Engage Students

Flipgrid is becoming increasingly popular for use in the classroom due to its interactive nature and similarity to widely used social media platforms. Faculty first create groups or classes on the site for students to join. They then create topic cards that provide prompts to

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The Mission to Mars Project: A Virtual Reality Learning Experience

Many institutions are experimenting with virtual reality (VR) to provide students with simulations that apply their theoretical learning to practice. We developed a VR experience, adapted from Joyner and Allen’s (2015) case study “Farming in Space? Developing a Sustainable Food Supply on Mars” and inspired

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Marking Interactive Presentations and Lessons with Genially

One of the most important developments in online education is closing the gap between content and engagement by making online learning content interactive. Instead of reading an article or watching a video and then engaging with it later in discussion or an assignment, apps allow

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Turn Websites into Lessons with Insert Learning

One major advantage of online learning is that an instructor can use the power of the internet for course content. Instead of having to create each lesson as a lecture in a face-to-face class, they can direct students to the exceptional content that already exists

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Improve Learning with Wizer Auto-graded Worksheets

Worksheets are commonly used in the K–12 realm to guide students through practice on new concepts. Despite their benefits, they are rarely used in higher education, perhaps due to the time needed to review them. But Wizer solves that problem by offering instructors a means

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Teaching Virtual Presentation Skills

The pandemic has made web conferencing common in the professional world as distributed workforces are becoming the norm. This means that students need to develop virtual presentation skills as well as live ones. Here I will outline some of the most important virtual presentation principles

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The learning management system (LMS) has long been the unified platform for hosting all content and activities in an online class. While it has served its purpose well, the advent of social media has exposed its limitations. Students find the multiple steps required to log in and reach a desired function clunky compared to the one-click convenience of apps. This limits the usefulness of the LMS on mobile devices. Whereas students snap photos for Instagram or text during their everyday activities, they tend to treat the LMS like a face-to-face classroom by sitting down at a computer a few times per week for schoolwork. Thus, their learning starts and ends with the class.

But social media apps allow faculty to extend learning beyond the physical classroom or LMS with activities that reinforce what was learned or demonstrate how class concepts apply to students’ lived experience. WhatsApp is ideal for this purpose. A messaging app, it integrates text, voice, video, and other media into one system, and its popularity is due to its user friendliness, reliability, simplicity, and security (end-to-end encryption for each message). As students are already using it, it is easy to add to a face-to-face or online class to complement what happens within the course.

Discussion

Discussion traditionally concludes at the end of class, whether in a face-to-face classroom or after the student has logged out of the LMS. But WhatsApp allows the discussion to continue. Insights on a topic often occur when we are thinking about a different subject or because we see connections to something outside of the topic. Thoughts that occur after the class or logging out of the LMS are generally forgotten, but giving students a way to post them on their phones with a single click of a button captures these ideas. WhatsApp also allows students to add visual enhancements, such as emojis and memes, that enliven communication and can motivate participation.

Communication with students

Another use for WhatsApp is one-to-one communication with students. Teachers can reach out to individual learners at any time or from any place, with no need to wait for the next class. They can also send out new class content, such as a YouTube video relating to a past or future class topic. Additionally, the integrated chat function allows students to discuss material as soon as they receive it, rather than later, when they have forgotten much of the content.

Group projects

Peer teaching and learning are important ways to gain knowledge and skills. WhatsApp makes collaboration between peers easy because students can not only message one another but also send documents, links to resources, and more. Students can plan and host group meetings on the app’s videoconferencing system as well, eliminating problems with trying to use multiple systems for different forms of communication.

Micro-lessons

Teachers have taken a growing interest in micro-lessons that reinforce learning between courses. For instance, an instructor might have students take photos of items they come across that illustrate a topic just covered in class. Students can also comment on what others have posted to delve deeper into real-world illustrations of class topics.

My expertise lies in language teaching and training educators in this field. This is why my focus is on activities related to the teaching and learning of languages.

Here are a few examples:

  1. An instructor or a learner posts four words, then asks the other participants to decide which word is the odd one out. Learners choose and explain their choice. All this can be done using text only, but there is no reason that voice messages cannot be used as well.
  2. Learners can a short, one-minute audio or video recording daily to reflect on their learning process and to identify whether they are making progress and what they might do to enhance such progress or remediate if things go wrong.
  3. Younger learners can create a photo dictionary by combining an image with a caption below. This can be kept simple, but it can also progressively be made more complex.

Professional communication

WhatsApp is an ideal way to host group discussions within a department, working group, or training program. Recently, a group of teachers in my country designed a short online course to equip educators with basic online teaching skills. As we wanted the conversation to continue outside of the class, we set up a WhatsApp group where we encourage and motivate each other (both trainers and participants). We share information and best practices, and chat informally to ensure that everyone is doing well.

When researchers asked students of instructors who use WhatsApp about the experience, they were told that it gives rise to intensive, efficient, and flexible communication between peers and instructor (Oliveira & Figueira, 2017); can clarify doubts more quickly than LMS communications; and allows for immediate encouragement. Students can also ask the class a question and get a quick answer from other students or the teacher. This fosters a community of practice, one that can continue long after a module or course ends. Such a community can be particularly beneficial for students with the same major as they are likely taking courses together. WhatsApp can foster a mutually supportive community among students, and a department can strengthen such community by hosting discussions between faculty and students on topics within the department’s field.

Try complementing your instruction with WhatsApp to increase student engagement and extend learning outside of class.

Reference

Figueira, Á., & Oliveira, L. (2017). The current state of fake news: Challenges and opportunities. Procedia Computer Science, 121, 817–825. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.procs.2017.11.106


Karen Ferreira-Meyers, PhD, is an associate professor and coordinator of linguistics and modern languages at the University of Eswatini.