• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

eSAIL

Engineering Studio for Advanced Instruction & Learning

  • Home
  • Faculty Services
    • Course Design
    • Canvas Support
    • Faculty Learning
    • Mediasite
    • Helpful Tools
  • Faculty Learning
    • Faculty Learning
    • Online Teaching Tips
    • Digital Accessibility Resources
    • Accessibility Series
    • Tutorials
    • Online Courses
    • Live Workshops
    • Webinars
    • Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
    • About Our Team
    • eSAIL’s Research Activities
    • Physical Location
    • Subscribe to our Newsletter
    • Website Feedback
Home » Faculty Services » Faculty Learning » Online Teaching Tips » Teaching Remotely Using Zoom or Mediasite (Checklist)

Teaching Remotely Using Zoom or Mediasite (Checklist)

Remote Teaching Course – A course that uses technology tools to achieve the same learning objectives as a face-to-face course. You may deliver the course using live synchronous lecture capture or asynchronous prerecorded lecture videos. The course contains student-student, student-content, and student-instructor interactions. You may deliver assessments fully online or by using remote methodologies.

Verification of University Requirement for Alternative Formats

  • Syllabus with course outcomes, communication plan, schedule, and guidelines for remote exams. Inform students about interaction strategies and etiquette.
  • Posted office hours each week. There are multiple opportunities for students to meet faculty, ask for clarification, or get help (an hour or more as appropriate for class size).

Recommended Practices for Teaching Remotely

  • Break up the lecture into more consumable, topic-based sections, and select an appropriate presentation template to use throughout the semester. (When you break lectures into approximately 20-minute parts or topical parts, they are generally easier to navigate and reuse in the future.)
  • Build opportunities for student-to-student, student-to-content, and student-to-faculty interaction into the course.
  • If using Zoom, create polls to use during class for student engagement, or plan for other engagement strategies. For Mediasite, integrate quizzes into the lecture and add to the recording as appropriate for the topic.
  • Plan discussion questions (if appropriate) for use in Canvas or other appropriate tools.
  • Build timed quizzes into the course. This strategy helps ensure a continuous assessment of learning and may help mitigate issues with academic dishonesty during finals.
  • Assessments or quizzes that give students an opportunity to test their knowledge are built in if appropriate. These can be very low-stakes or ungraded quizzes referred to as a “formative assessment” or “check for understanding”.
  • Scaffold assignments (build steps into major assignments so students have the opportunity to fail at a step but are able to recover).
Made by eSAIL
Last Updated: 5/5/2023
Questions? Email us at eSAIL@tamu.edu.

Primary Sidebar

Online Teaching Tips

  • Home
  • Things To Consider When Going Online
  • 5 Steps to Getting Started with Teaching Online
  • Two Ways to Enhance Your Online Course
  • Teaching Remotely Using Zoom or Mediasite (Checklist)
  • Digital Accessibility Resources
  • Open Educational Resources (OER)
Texas A&M University Engineering

Footer

About Our Team

Our team is comprised of individuals with development, video producing, accessibility, writing, and learning/teaching expertise – all ready to partner with faculty...
Meet eSAIL Team Members!

Contact

Online Course & Mediasite Support
eSAIL@tamu.edu
We'd love to hear from you!
Contact Us

Quick Links

  • Site Map
  • Website Feedback
  • Submit Website Issue
  • State Links & Policies

Site Search & Subscribe

Get tips each quarter to make each semester more successful than the last!
Subscribe to our Newsletter

© 2025 · Texas A&M University · All Rights Reserved · Log in