With a combination of joy and surprise Arielle also looks forward to her daughter, Willa, celebrating her first birthday soon.
In Joe Haldeman's novel, The Forever War, humanity engages in a centuries-long interstellar conflict with a mysterious alien race. After millennia fighting these opaque beings from across the galaxy we're finally able to communicate with them. The leaders from both races open their communications by asking, “why did you attack us?”
Communicating with students can sometimes feel like bridging that species gap. While we can command (or try to command) their attention in the classroom, getting them to come to office hours or to email us when they have a question often feels like a losing battle. One solution might be to open more spaces for communal dialog. I'd like to recommend two avenues you may not be using, and remind you of a few 'oldies but goodies' you can use.
You're probably already:
But have you also
By doing so, you're making yourself hospitable to students who are willing to use these standard communication tools. You can expand that hospitality by opening more lines for communication. Here are two new tricks that I have been using lately.
The first is to give your students access to you via instant messaging. Even if you haven't used instant messaging before, you can download and sign up to use it pretty quickly. There are four primary clients people use to IM: AOL Instant Messenger (AIM), Yahoo, MSN Messenger, and ICQ. In talking with students, I've found that most students use at least two of these. I've had good success with AIM and MSN—for each account, I have a couple students who contact me regularly using that venue, often to ask questions that I consider important but they have said wouldn't warrant an email.
You can get started by signing up for accounts with AIM, MSN, and/or ICQ, and then download Trillian, a free program that lets you log in and manage multiple IM clients. In other words, once you have your AIM, MSN, or ICQ accounts set up, Trillian can run all of them together. Thus, I have one MSN account I use with students, an AIM account I used with students, and a different MSN account I use with friends; I monitor all three simultaneously using Trillian.
Learn more at: http://www.ceruleanstudios.com/
I have also begun including my AIM, MSN, and Trillian userids in the contact info for my courses and in the signature of my email. This insures students know they can contact me via these channels.
I just started using Facebook, so I haven't personally seen results with it yet, but I heard some interesting discussions about it at a conference I attended recently. In particular, these presentations pointed to the ways students often use facebook to keep track and communicate with friends in colleges around the country. Making yourself available through that venue can be another way to maintain an 'open door' for your students.
You can learn more about facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/
Alas, now that you have these doors open, how do you keep students from overwhelming you with last minute worries, queries, and questions? Here are a few tips to manage these new venues:
I hope these new channels will give you new contact points with your students. Ideally, they will give those timid students the impetus to reach out and say hello, perhaps preventing their confusion from becoming their very own Forever War.
See you next month!
Brendan
Department newsletter compiled by M. Killian McCurrie.