04-30-2019 12:31 PM
Go to solutionHi there, I am a first time course creator.
I'm not sure if this is possible but here goes my question:
How do I receive the email addresses of my students and how can I interact with them on a one-on-one basis?
Thanking you in advance
Solved! Go to Solution.
04-30-2019 12:43 PM
Go to solutionYou can't get the email addresses of your students, unless they offer them to you voluntarily. It's how Udemy respects the privacy of students and ensures they don't end up on hundreds of mailing lists that are outside of their control.
That said, there are many ways to interact with students on Udemy:
Some instructors also host their own course materials and communities on their own websites, and direct students there as part of the setup for the course. If students find your mailing list signup there, that's OK. But you're not allowed to require students to sign up to your own mailing list as part of the course.
04-30-2019 09:46 PM
Go to solution
@FrankKane provided a great answer that I'd like to add one item to:
A couple of years ago I cut over to project based courses. What does this mean:
1) Try to offer a take-away for the student as early as possible in your course. Keep offering these take-aways throughout the course.
2) Each section in my course comes with an article leccture based project that students respond to by submitting work for review by me and their peers to the Q&A section of the course.
Since making this change students have responded in waves (in reality, it becomes a lot of work having to monitor and respond to all their section projects). Students like the projects that actually give them little modules of benefit they can take away from the course. In fact, quite often by the time they've finished the last project they've achieve the purpose of the course.
If you want plenty of student course involvement and 1-on-1 interaction, project based courses is the way to go (IMHO).
---Brian
04-30-2019 12:43 PM
Go to solutionYou can't get the email addresses of your students, unless they offer them to you voluntarily. It's how Udemy respects the privacy of students and ensures they don't end up on hundreds of mailing lists that are outside of their control.
That said, there are many ways to interact with students on Udemy:
Some instructors also host their own course materials and communities on their own websites, and direct students there as part of the setup for the course. If students find your mailing list signup there, that's OK. But you're not allowed to require students to sign up to your own mailing list as part of the course.
04-30-2019 09:46 PM
Go to solution
@FrankKane provided a great answer that I'd like to add one item to:
A couple of years ago I cut over to project based courses. What does this mean:
1) Try to offer a take-away for the student as early as possible in your course. Keep offering these take-aways throughout the course.
2) Each section in my course comes with an article leccture based project that students respond to by submitting work for review by me and their peers to the Q&A section of the course.
Since making this change students have responded in waves (in reality, it becomes a lot of work having to monitor and respond to all their section projects). Students like the projects that actually give them little modules of benefit they can take away from the course. In fact, quite often by the time they've finished the last project they've achieve the purpose of the course.
If you want plenty of student course involvement and 1-on-1 interaction, project based courses is the way to go (IMHO).
---Brian
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