5 Keys to Facilitating Online - part 1 of 3

We all know good facilitation skills: Ask don't tell; encourage discussion among participants-not just between you and the participants; play devil's advocate to challenge people's thinking, etc.,

But when we move from the classroom to the virtual classroom we seem to revert immediately to lecture and presentation mode.  If you think straightforward lecture is a snoozer in the classroom, it’s ten times worse in the virtual classroom when the only thing participants have to keep them engaged is the sound of your voice.

In order to deliver online classes that are engaging, here are five keys to better facilitation in the virtual classroom.

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1.  Facilitate, facilitate, facilitate!

A common complaint of new online facilitators is that the participants aren't paying attention and are frequently multitasking.  That is only true if you are not facilitating.  If you are facilitating your participants would be too involved with the learning process to have the time or the inclination to multitask.  According to Wikipedia, a facilitator is someone who helps a group of people understand their common objectives and assists them to plan to achieve them.  Another definition, also from Wikipedia, states that a facilitator is a person who makes it easier for other people to accomplish their objectives by offering advice and assistance.  A common theme here is that the facilitator is not the focus of the learning event; the facilitator brings the learning about through the training participants. 

The best virtual classroom learning experiences put the dialogue and the learning process firmly in the hands of the participants.  If you're bringing people together online in order to simply make a presentation - don't.  Record the presentation and let your participants view it on-demand.  Bring people together online for the interactive and collaborative outcomes that can be achieved when we bring people together.