How to foster belonging to advance equitable learning in your classes
We must extend belonging to help students feel they鈥檙e cut out for college, lower barriers such as impostor syndrome and ultimately support learning, says Flower Darby
What does it feel like when you鈥檙e part of the group? When you feel accepted and respected for who you are? I often ask this question in keynotes and faculty workshops. The responses are invariably positive: affirming, validating, supportive. In a word: good.
Then I ask the flip side. What鈥檚 it like when you鈥檙e not? When you 诲辞苍鈥檛 feel part of the group? Answers poignantly reveal why psychologist Abraham Maslow argued that . Faculty participants tell me they feel excluded, shamed, demeaned. It feels bad when you鈥檙e not part of the group.
This thought exercise drives home the importance of belonging for college students. shows that when students feel they belong at a college or university, when they sense that this is their place and we are their people, academic persistence and achievement improve significantly. We can meaningfully advance equitable learning outcomes when we help students feel they belong in our classes, especially minoritised and other under-represented student populations.
- Belonging: why it is the next step on the equity, diversity and inclusion ladder
- Purposefully building identity and belonging among students
- Universities must do better at bridging the gap between diversity and belonging
Recognising the impact that belonging has on student retention and success, colleges and universities are investing in efforts to help students feel welcome and included. But there鈥檚 much more we can do within our classes, as my co-authors and I argue in . While college-wide efforts are helpful, students spend the most time in class with us, whether in person or online. As faculty we have a unique role in extending belonging to help students feel they鈥檙e cut out for college, lowering barriers such as and ultimately supporting their learning and equitable success. Here are three practical ways to get started:
First, we can communicate belonging to students explicitly, up front and repeatedly. My co-author includes a statement at the beginning of her syllabus that communicates encouragement and appreciation for each person in the learning community, stating that it will be a great class because of each individual who鈥檚 a part of it.
If you choose to add such a statement, students who may doubt their ability to succeed in your class can immediately see that they鈥檙e part of the group. You can strengthen this message with periodic, informal video, written or verbal announcements in the classroom. Tell students that it鈥檚 common to feel uncertain about whether they belong in this class and that you鈥檙e there to support them and help them realise they do have what it takes to succeed in this course and college in general. This message can be especially impactful during the first two weeks of class, before or after the first major exam or assessment and around mid-semester. Weave in this beyond-the-content coaching throughout the semester to help students feel accepted, valued and empowered.
Another way to help students feel they鈥檙e part of the group is to prioritise interactions and relationships with you and other students. Feeling connected to others in class, both online and in person, predicts , both of which precede academic achievement. Although you may not have thought about the importance of relationships when planning your college course, the research is clear that . This doesn鈥檛 mean you have to be every student鈥檚 best friend, nor should you compromise appropriate professional and academic boundaries. However, demonstrating openness and approachability to your students through encouraging words, tone of voice, demeanour and other non-verbal cues will help students feel connected to you in ways that foster engaged learning.
And it鈥檚 not just about you: facilitate connections and relationships among students to maximise this strategy. Consider semester-long groups in person or in asynchronous online discussion forums. Structure getting-to-know-you activities, whether groups meet all semester long or change week by week. Build these into group tasks and establish the expectation of supporting others in the group (for example, encourage students to check in with their groupmate if they miss class or haven鈥檛 yet posted in an online small group discussion 鈥 maybe they need class notes or another form of academic or social support). Or help students find study group members, as Lisa Nunn recommends in . Perhaps set up a Google Sheet where students can find other people to study with based on similar schedules, for example.
Finally, we can extend belonging by normalising academic effort and challenge, another recommendation from Nunn. Instead of saying: 鈥淚 know you already learned this concept in a previous class鈥︹ (which automatically causes doubt and uncertainty in students who may not have previously learned the concept), say: 鈥淵ou may already know this concept, but let鈥檚 review it together to make sure we鈥檙e all on the same page.鈥
We may also want to incorporate short phrases such as: 鈥淭his concept is challenging, but I know you鈥檒l get it with practice,鈥 thereby reinforcing your message that all students belong in your class and are capable of the work required. Such communications help students recognise that expending effort to learn is normal and that doing so does not mean they鈥檙e not cut out for college. Rather, it means they鈥檙e engaging in productive learning behaviours that promote their success.
Conveying to students that they are a part of your learning community and that you will help them achieve the learning objectives shows your confidence that they have what it takes to succeed. This messaging, as well as structured activities such as purposeful group work or assistance with creating study groups, is likely to result in increased belonging and subsequently increased equity in our classes.
Flower Darby is associate director in the Teaching for Learning Center at the University of Missouri, US. Her recent books include and .
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