We will or have all taught cohort groups at one time or another. Here is some great information to keep in mind when dealing with this phenomenon.
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By Diana Adam-Uyder, EdD
The influx of nontraditional adult students in higher education
has resulted in unprecedented institutional competition. Colleges and
universities, vying for attention and increased enrollments, seek creative
solutions to attract and retain students. Many degrees have been designed or
modified to follow the cohort model, creating temporary cultures of students
who participate in programs following an accelerated lockstep sequence. Cohorts
start and finish programs as collective groups and share instructors and
experiences along the way. Productive learning environments and the temporary
culture of a group encourage student productivity and enhance the overall
academic experience.
That’s the upside. Conversely, cohorts can also evolve into
dysfunctional cadres intent on undermining authority and destroying the very
learning environment established to support them. Due to its close-knit nature,
a cohort has a strong potential to become a learning community whose members
acquire, use, and share their collective knowledge (Brown & Duguid, 2000)
in both positive and negative ways.
Due to the cohort model’s reputation of encouraging collective
group personalities that may be intimidating, some faculty may prefer to avoid
teaching in such settings. The reality, though, is that in order to address
enrollment issues and remain current themselves, faculty must adapt to new
degree offerings and structures designed creatively to serve these student
populations.
Teaching in cohorts is radically different from teaching open
enrollment sections of the same course. Faculty may find themselves teaching
several “core” courses throughout a program and serving the same group of
students multiple times as they participate. Faculty who previously specialized
in one particular area of content may find themselves acting as “generalists”
and teaching cohort classes covering topics in which they have limited
expertise. The idea of having to teach the same group over and over in courses
with unfamiliar content may be daunting or even discouraging. Further, faculty
who are underprepared to engage repeatedly with the same cohort groups over
time find themselves at risk for student disrespect and incivility, negative
course evaluations, and subsequent stress associated with feelings of
inadequacy.
To encourage a positive experience for all parties, faculty
tasked with teaching cohorts should consider adopting new paradigms and
teaching behaviors. Here are a few best practices, derived from my own 15 years
of cohort leadership experience and collaboration:
- Develop a set of explicit expectations for learners and communicate them consistently within every course and experience comprising the cohort. This common dispositional framework can evolve into a Code of Conduct enabling students to self-monitor their own and peer behavior. “All learners are responsible for the growth of every member of the community; helping one person helps the group to succeed” (Engstrom, Santo and Yost, p. 152, 2008).
- Be present throughout the cohort cycle. Even if you aren’t teaching a particular class that the cohort is taking, be “visible” to students by connecting with the other instructor(s) and knowing what students are doing and studying in their other courses. Connect concepts to the content in your own classes. Create enduring understandings for student participants through those connections.
- Stay organized. Mindfully design lectures and activities with intention and focus on specific learning targets. Students appreciate well-organized and purposeful learning experiences, and they respect the instructors who design and deliver such experiences.
- Cultivate a cohesive and supportive community. Talk to students and get to know who they are outside of the campus setting. Design initial ice-breaker activities and ongoing academic sharing experiences in such a way that they allow students to exhibit their own personalities throughout their time in the cohort.
- Use a variety of relevant and meaningful student-centered learning activities. Facilitate the learning process in the classroom rather than relying only upon lecture. Take interesting and relevant field trips into the community.
- Let students know you care about their experience and want to make it better. Ask for informal feedback intermittently throughout the cohort cycle. Prepare discussion posts that invite responses, questions, discussions, and reflections. Use digital survey tools (e.g., Survey Monkey) to gather more specific summative feedback and actually make changes to your classes or program based on the results.
- Understand and encourage the use of technology in your courses. Embrace blended learning by allowing students to complete certain parts of your course online. Incorporate student response clickers to encourage active participation during lectures.
- Plan a relevant, meaningful, and memorable capstone experience for the cohort, such as a formal and credit-bearing internship, a service-learning activity, or simply an event to celebrate the group’s achievements. It’s important to recognize everyone’s contributions and to have fun while doing so.
References
Brown, J. S., & Duguid, P. (2000). The social life of information. Boston: Harvard Business School Press.
Engstrom, M. E., Santo, S. A., & Yost, R. M. (2008). Knowledge building in an online cohort. Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 9(2), 151-167.
Rhodes, C. (2004). Academic and Social Integration in Higher Education: a survey of satisfaction and dissatisfaction within a first-year education studies cohort at a new university. Journal of Further and Higher Education, 28(2), May 2004.
For this course, I would ask you to consider how instructional design theories and strategies could be implemented in the dealings with cohort groups. Would you do anything different than what you have previously described?
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