Planning Your First Day of Class

What you do on your first day of class establishes the learning environment for the rest of your course, so it’s critical to think and plan carefully.

Venn diagram with “first day of class” in the center, surrounded by intersecting circles of “motivate learning,” “establish expectations,” and “personalize the experience.

  1. You want every student to leave the first class thinking:
    • This will be a good course.
    • I’m okay, I’m safe being here.
    • I have something valuable to contribute.
  2. Therefore, resist the urge to simply “go over the syllabus” or launch right into Topic 1.
  3. Instead, plan a first day that includes significant time spent engaging with others.
  4. Share expectations considering what students want to know most about:
  • What they will be learning about and why it matters
  • What the workload is like in terms of time and also the work they will be asked to produce
  • What the participation expectations are
  • How they will be evaluated
  • What you are like as an instructor: are you accessible? are you flexible? will you be someone they can approach if they are lost or in trouble?

As you explain your expectations, be explicit and specific whenever possible. Don’t leave room for interpretation, and encourage questions. You might even ask students to write briefly anonymous questions on scraps of paper that you can collect and work through.

5. Foster a climate of meeting expectations through smart behaviors by joining the Strong Student Campaign and showing one slide each day your class meets.

Planning Your First Day of Class” by Peter Newbury is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, excerpted.

 

Last Modified: Thursday, January 2, 2025 11:24 am

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For more information or help, please email the Office for Faculty Excellence or make an appointment with a consultant.