|
|
The Chemical Educator
ISSN: 1430-4171 (electronic version)
Table of
Contents
Abstract Volume 24
(2019) pp 183-188
A Personalized Automated Email Tool to Connect Faculty with
Students in Large STEM Courses
Tara S. Carpenter*,†, Sarah M. Bass†,
and Linda C. Hodges‡
†Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland 21250, carpent@umbc.edu; ‡Faculty Development Center, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland 21250
Received September 20, 2019. Accepted November 11, 2019.
Published: 31 December
2019
Abstract. Undergraduate
student success in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)
majors often hinges on the satisfactory completion of large gateway
introductory courses such as general chemistry. First-year or transfer
students’ achievement in such courses may be affected by their first exposure
to the large class format. Specifically, a sense of belonging, a factor shown
to be important for student engagement and effort in STEM classes, may be difficult to attain in
large classes. We report here on the development and implementation of a
personalized, automated email tool as a way for instructors to connect with
students, signal their concern for students’ performance, and offer them
support. Instructors across the two-semester sequence in a large university
general chemistry course used a spreadsheet to sort students into email
categories based on their exam performance, differentiating by degree of grade
improvement or decline. The corresponding messages offered advice,
encouragement, or cautions and invited students to avail themselves of various
resources. The emails were sent batchwise but personalized using a Google
script function. In an end-of-course survey, students indicated that the emails
made them feel the instructor cared, helped support and encourage them,
lessened their feelings of anonymity, and helped them improve. This tool
provides an easy way for instructors to create a sense of connection and caring
in a large class and contribute positively to students’ motivation and
achievement.
Key Words: In the Classroom; general chemistry; large courses; student motivation; student belonging; email
(*) Corresponding author.
(E-mail: carpent@umbc.edu)
Article
in PDF format (135 KB) HTML
format
© The Chemical Educator 1996-2024
|