I notice that the course is already well balanced in its blend: each block has two weeks online and one morning in Utrecht. It gives a lot of energy to see each other. Without the live session you miss part of the group process. Fortunately, the last session could be a live session, although two people immediately wanted to participate online. At the last minute we received two more emails ... they prefered online too! We suddenly found ourselves in a real hybrid meeting: half online, half face-to-face.
Will hybrid sessions be the new norm?
Is hybrid the future? I would not know. Maybe we will have more online learning trajectories than blended. It is interesting that one participant did not bother to travel because it would save her time. The standard could also become to organize hybrid session. Firstly, because we can accommodate fewer people or students in a room (we had to cope with a maximum of 9). Secondly, it gives participants the freedom to decide for themselves whether they are willing to travel and meet others. In any case, we thought it gave a lot of energy to be together like this, even for the online participants!
How to organize a hybrid session
We have quite some experiences with one participant online. In this case we have her face embodied on the laptop via the webcam and carry her around. In this case we had four online participants. We asked in advance about the tool options (many are not allowed to zoom): the preferences were Skype and Zoom. We decided to put people on two laptops. Mainly, because having two laptops with each two people made the organization of the groupwork easier. In the session, it also proved to be fun to have two laptop groups, so that it is not 'us in the room' versus 'them online'. It is a challenge, however, to ensure that the online participant's experience runs smoothly. Some tips from our experience:
- It helps to experience it for yourself, so offer to join as an online participant at a live meeting or meeting.
- Make sure the online participants are clearly visible. That can be on a big screen or as a 'laptop head'. This way you avoid to forget them.
- An external webcam can ensure that the room is clearly visible to the online participants. This is especially nice with an online speaker, as he / she also sees the reactions of the audience.
- It can be more difficult to break into a discussion online, but this can also apply to the live participants. Therefore, agree how to ask for the word, eg by raising your hand. As a facilitator you may structure the important more by giving turns, so everyone gets their change.
- Work regularly in subgroups, mixing online participants with face-to-face (better with headset). Or create a group of two online participants who may exchange online together.
- The audio was not always optimal for the online participants. A speakerphone might improve that and is something I would like to try next time.
- Divide the care for the online participants. Who is watching who? You can divide the tasks between facilitators or apply a buddy system whereby everybody who is present face-to-face is the buddy of an online person.
- With large groups both face-to-face and online, it is good to have a face-to-face and online facilitator who work together and occasionally work with their own group.
The group dynamics in this blended session
The group dynamics were fine after all, because they want to stay in touch! One person never met the others face-to-face but clearly felt comfortable. I felt there was no real difference between the online and life participants (except that we had our coffees together in the sun :).
A participant: "Never had such a steep learning curve. And today, I experienced firsthand how hybrid learning works. It went really well: beyond expectations!"
More tips?
- Tips for organizing a large event with a livestream here
- Experiences Betreat with hybrid workshops here.
- Experience with a Hybrid session in Mongolia with the trainer at a distance by Ben Ziegler here
- And fun: my experiences training at the distance in Cambodia in 2011 using Zipcast and Skype
Actually, I also believe that "hybrid sessions" will be the new norm. Well, at least Corona brought the strict separation between face-to-face-meetings and virtual meetings to and end.
ReplyDeleteHow can we all adapt to the new normal? Every country (except New Zealand, I'd say) has to adapt to the new normal with a balancing act between safety and freedom, contact and distance.
And if (I don't hope for that, but it isn't an unrealistic scenario) we won't find a cure or vaccines within the next 1-2 years, this "hybrid" or "fluid" way of communication and collaboration will become the new standard. Some people will decide to go to the office (at their own risks) and others, mainly risk groups, will continue working from home.
And even if we beat COVID-19, I guess many employees will insist on keeping their freedom of choice, when it comes to selecting their job location etc.
We'll see!
Anyway, thanks a lot for sharing your valuable insights.