EDTL Approach: Consider Communication & Engagement

[favorite_button]
EDTL Approach: Consider Communication & Engagement

Creator(s) (alphabetical)

Aoibhinn Gilmartin, Laura Anne Scanlon, Marian O'Connor, Orna Farrell, Rob Lowney, Ruairí O'Gallchoir

Organisation(s)

EDTL project webinar, IUA EDTL

Discipline(s)

Teaching & Learning

Topic(s)

Accessibility & Inclusion, Digital Learning, Student Success, Teaching and Learning Practice

License

CC BY-SA

Media Format

Video

Date Submitted

Submitted by

Export Resource Data

Description

An EDTL webinar focusing on Considering Communication & Engagement

Benefit of this resource and how to make the best use of it

This webinar focuses on approaches to make module information clear and easy to fine, on selecting appropriate tools/strategies for class communication as well as engagement and community building/social presence.

Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA)

This work is licensed under a CC BY-SA license, allowing adaptation and sharing with proper attribution, provided derivative works use the same license.

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
? This citation is automatically generated and may require adjustment. Always verify it against your style guide.
Gilmartin, A., Scanlon, L. A., O'Connor, M., Farrell, O., Lowney, R., & O'Gallchoir, R. (2021). Edtl approach: consider communication & engagement. National Resource Hub (Ireland). Retrieved from: https://hub.teachingandlearning.ie/resource/edtl-approach-consider-communication-engagement/ License: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA).

Adapting this resource? Share your version!

If you have modified or adopted this resource, share your version here. Tracking adaptations helps us measure impact and connects others with useful updates.

Related OER

This case study outlines a first-year intervention at SETU Waterford using a timetabled weekly session to tackle common causes of academic failure such as time management, assessment planning. and study skills. It is intended for programme teams seeking practical, low-resource approaches to improving student progression and retention.

This OER explores novice programmers’ experiences of pair programming across face-to-face, hybrid, and remote settings. It provides insights into collaboration, role switching, satisfaction, and challenges, helping educators and students understand how to effectively prepare learners for modern hybrid software development environments.

This OER guides students through human-in-the-loop software development, demonstrating how AI tools can be effectively supervised, refined, and integrated across the Software Lifecycle. Designed for computing educators and learners, it combines agile practice, teamwork, DISC awareness, testing, and critical reflection on human–AI collaboration.