All Red Hawks can be strong students. Faculty and staff from across the university have developed a campaign to raise awareness of the behaviors and actions that strong students develop and implement regularly. This campaign makes explicit what it takes to become strong – it’s small, simple acts that, in total, lead to success.
You may not have come to teaching thinking you’d need to teach “studenting” skills, but, in fact, it’s those skills that many of our students need support in developing. Successful instructors teach something much harder than their discipline; they teach learning.
Each week of the semester, a new theme is promoted: on social media, on digital screens, in messaging to students and in university classes. The Office for Faculty Excellence will alert instructors about the week’s theme and offer guidance for supporting students in developing the behaviors.
You may also direct students to this student-facing information page produced by Student Life.
Do you have feedback about the campaign? Please let us know.
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What to Do
Please join the Strong Student Campaign by pledging to support students in adopting the small, simple behaviors that are essential to success in college!
Your engagement can be simple: Share each week’s message through slides, a Canvas announcement, or other tool.
By pledging to join the campaign, you can expect two short surveys from us: at mid-semester, a check-in survey where you give us some quick feedback, and at the end of the semester where you give us feedback on the campaign and how it worked in your classes.
Staff will be asked for their feedback and given the opportunity to share how they have implemented the campaign in their work.
Updated slides for spring now available!
Spring 2025 main campus edition
Spring 2025 Bloomfield campus edition
Spring 2025 online modalities edition
Spring 2025 7-week term edition
Spring 2025 7-week term edition
Make your expectations for strong “studenting” skills clear by utilizing the slides that are available for you to copy or download.
Suggestions:
- As you set up for class, project the week’s slide; students will read the slide as they enter class and await for the lesson for the day to begin.
- Leave the slide up as you take attendance and attend to other details.
- To simply the transition to your planned lesson, copy each week’s slide into your own existing content.
- Copy a single slide into your own content slides, or copy the whole deck for your own use.
You won’t be surprised by the slides’ content — it’s all those little tips you might think of but not actually articulate consistently.
*For asynchronous courses, consider including the message, adapting as appropriate, as a part of your weekly overview or announcement.
Slide Themes:
- Week 1: Attend Class Like You Mean It/ Engage in Your Course Like You Mean It
- Week 2: Do the Work (On Time)
- Week 3: Plan Your Time (Better)
- Week 4: Seek Academic Help
- Week 5: Take Care of Your Health
- Week 6: Make Your Own Community
- Week 7: Know Your Strengths & Weaknesses
- Week 8: Attend Class Like You Mean It
- Week 9: Deal with Absences Effectively/Deal with Falling Behind Effectively
- Week 10: Plan Your Time (Better)
- Week 11: Seek Academic Help
- Week 12: Take Care of Your Health
- Week 13: Lock In and Finish Strong (new!)
- Week 14: Celebrate Your Success
Prefer to share the weekly message with students via Canvas? Import our Strong Student Campaign module from Canvas Commons–updated for Spring 2025. We have versions for online and face-to-face modalities. The module contains a weekly themed message you can share as a page or copy/paste into an announcement. It also includes optional assignments you can pick and choose from, and adapt to your class, if you wish. In Canvas Commons (accessible via the far left navigation menu in Canvas), search “OFE” and “Strong Student Campaign.”
Face-to-Face modalities module
Instructors are also invited to extend their participation further and utilize the instructor strategies that we suggest for each theme.
- Let all students know they are capable and can succeed.
- Incentivize attendance and make absences, missing work and/or late work consequential.
- Provide a comprehensive schedule of Canvas assignments to populate students’ Canvas “To Do” list.
- Assign homework regularly — students learn best with manageable consistent engagement.
- Submit grades in Canvas promptly so students stay on track and see their emerging final grade
- Require (and evaluate) engagement with readings, viewings, or anything you assign for homework.
- Keep class active and interesting: in every class session students should speak, do, write, interact, or perform. Make it obvious that class matters, and that it’s a place of active learning.
- Spread out the points — students should start earning points by the second week of class, and they should continue to do every week throughout the semester.
- Make your expectations explicit. For example,
- If you want laptops closed, say so.
- If you want phones removed, say so.
- If you want every student to speak once in a class, say so.
- If you think students cannot learn in a class if they have not completed the reading, say so.
- Use Navigate to identify students who are struggling. There are two reporting periods each semester, and instructors can also enter “alerts” at any time. Make referrals. Talk to students individually, pointing out concerns you have and referring students to resources.
See Student Support Resources for a full list of health services (mental and physical), academic support services, and other “life” support referral options.
Last Modified: Friday, January 17, 2025 2:35 pm
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