Teacher For Learning 

Teacher for Learning

Climate of the Course

The social, emotional, and intellectual climate of the course and the classroom has an impact on learning. You can promote a positive climate in your classroom by:

  • Providing opportunities for small-group learning and interaction.
  • Creating a classroom charter.
  • Listening carefully.
  • Offering opportunities to be heard.
  • Providing an environment that makes uncertainty safe.
  • Examining your assumptions.
  • Being respectful and inclusive.
  • Considering cognitive, psychomotor, and affective domains.
  • Being an authentic and genuine teacher.
  • Co-designing learning goals and classroom expectations.

These factors that promote a healthy classroom climate will vary depending on the people involved. It is always best to establish ground rules for your class right from the outset so that the classroom climate standards are co-constructed and meaningful to the group as a whole.

Education

What does a positive classroom climate look like online? As you will see in other modules, the Community of Inquiry is a helpful framework. Beyond just the presentation of content, described as the “cognitive presence,” it is also important to balance and consider social and teaching presences.

Extend Community 

community

Create an introductory activity connected to your discipline to get to know your learners. For example:

  • In a human geography class, you could ask every student to identify a location from which they would want to conduct field work
  • For english literature, each student could discuss what fictional character they would like to invite to dinner, and why.
  • In history, ask what figure, living or dead, would be the most interesting to have at a cocktail party?

Can you think of some fun and interesting questions for your discipline?

Visit the Extend Community Space Please Allow Me to Introduce My Field discussion area (in the #teacher4learning channel) to share your discipline related questions!

Feedback and Practice
Metacognition