Teacher Tech blog with Alice Keeler

Paperless Is Not a Pedagogy

Alice Keeler

Google Classroom: Check In with Students

weekly check in google classroom (1)
Google Classroom: Check In with Students

weekly check in google classroom (1)

Create a Weekly Check In for Google Classroom

In previous semesters I used a Google Form to have students check in every week. While Google Forms are the best thing since sliced bread, this semester I switched to using Google Classroom for my weekly check in. Note this is not a 5 a day or “Do Now” but rather an opportunity to connect with students.

Hear From Students

I think it is important to hear from every student so I want to give them an opportunity to ask a question, share a compliment or concern or give a suggestion. When designing lessons, the most important thing to consider is the students you have in front of your face right now. Regularly listening to students helps me to adjust my lessons for their needs rather than my habits or what I’m comfortable with.

Why Not Forms

Forms are awesome, my problem was once I have the information from the students how do I reply back? In the spreadsheet from the Form responses I would insert a feedback column and reply back to each student. I used a mail merge to email each student what they had told me along with my comments back. However, this took me quite a bit of time and the students had to wait for me to respond to everyone and create the mail merge before they got the email. Students could obviously reply to the email but they rarely did.

Switching to Google Classroom

Instead of a Google Form, I now create an assignment in Google Classroom to ask students for questions/concerns/compliments/suggestions.
Sign in and please leave a question in the private comments

What I gave up by moving to Google Classroom was data. On the Google Form, I asked a whole bunch of multiple choice questions and checkboxes in addition to the questions/concerns/compliments/suggestions. I had all this data but rarely used it, the heart of what I needed was an ability to connect with each student every week.

Conversations in Google Classroom

I like to say that comments in Google Classroom are not comments, they are conversations. I do NOT use the ask a question feature in Google Classroom for the weekly check in. Instead, I create a regular assignment. I ask students to click on OPEN and use the private comments to leave me a question/concern/compliment/suggestion.

I am immediately able to view and respond to student responses right in the private comments of Google Classroom.
have a private feedback conversation

Since I receive an email notification when students leave a private comment I am able tor respond super fast from my phone. I filter my Gmail to star any private comments and put a “private comment” label on the email.
star and label private comments

Keep it Simple

This requires almost no tech ability on my part. I did not have to create and attach a Google Form. I did not have to manipulate my spreadsheet. I did not have to set up a mail merge. I SIMPLY REPLY.

Using private comments is super simple but it’s also better. Unlike an email, private comments really feel like a conversation. When students have questions we can have a back and forth until they get it. If the student provides a suggestion I can converse with the student in private comments to clarify how to improve the class.

Feedback conversations

Private Comment conversation

rachel getting the hang of the class

jacqueline private comments

2 thoughts on “Google Classroom: Check In with Students

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

© 2024 All Rights Reserved.

💥 FREE OTIS WORKSHOP

Join Alice Keeler, Thursday Mar 28th or register to gain access to the recording.
Create a free OTIS account.

Join Alice Keeler for this session for a way to create dynamic and interactive digital lessons. The Desmos platform is completely free and allows for any topic to be created or customized.

Exit this pop up by pressing escape or clicking anywhere off the pop up.