Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education         ISSN: 1759-667X 

Special Issue 22: Compendium of Innovative Practice    October 2021 
________________________________________________________________________ 

When the flipped classroom disappoints: engaging students 
with asynchronous learning 
 

Alicja Syska 
University of Plymouth, UK 
 

 

Keywords: flipped classroom; asynchronous learning; student engagement; Covid-19. 

 

 

The challenge 
 

Moving teaching online meant designing synchronous and asynchronous activities that 

would allow as many students as possible easy access to learning. A lot of educational 

support was available from the start of this emergency pivot, and much of the early advice 

recommended asynchronous teaching (Brown University, 2020) as a form of flipped 

classroom, or even encouraged refusal to do synchronous teaching altogether (Barrett-

Fox, 2020). 

 

What we all quickly realised was that it takes more time to teach online than it does in a 

standard classroom. Interactions flow less naturally, creating longer pauses between 

contributions; moving between breakout rooms and the main room can be messy; late 

arrivals and technical difficulties cause interruptions; not to mention student reluctance to 

participate or unmute/turn on the camera. It also takes more time to build rapport online, 

especially in the context of learning development sessions, which lack continuity across a 

semester or academic year. As a result, I found myself not being able to deliver the same 

amount of instruction and interaction as I was used to. The most logical solution to this 

problem was to draw on my experience of subject teaching and introduce the flipped 

classroom (Mazur, 1997; Talbert, 2017). 

 

 

The response 
 



Syska     When the flipped classroom disappoints:  
  engaging students with asynchronous learning 
 

 
Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, Issue 22: Compendium October 2021  2 
 

Creating asynchronous materials to be followed by synchronous sessions seemed like a 

perfect response to the new reality of online delivery. Being a hybrid practitioner, both a 

lecturer and a learning developer, I had already adopted this approach in my subject 

specialism, both in person and online. I pre-recorded my lectures and collated them into 

Xerte learning objects, with the help of the University of Nottingham resources. The 

materials I created consisted of short PowerPoint presentations, combined with visual 

plates overlaid with voiceovers, short tasks, and activities. In my subject specialism, the 

approach worked very well, as the Xertes naturally replaced traditional lectures. I therefore 

decided to adopt this pedagogy to the context of my learning development workshops. 

 

The advantages seemed manifold. Students could not only engage with my Xerte 

resources in their own time but could also keep returning to them as needed. Investing the 

time to create them promised to free my precious synchronous session time to custom 

deliver according to specific student needs and offer more opportunities for questions, 

clarification, and in-depth explorations of particular aspects of writing, making the sessions 

more relevant to the participants. It motivated me to create a range of short videos on 

different aspects of writing, which I then combined into particular configurations to serve 

specific cohort needs. For example, if a session was to address the issues involved in 

critical analytical writing, I would include videos on the general principles of academic 

writing, critical thinking, and building an argument, interspersed with activities testing 

students’ understanding, as well as links to further support and an opportunity to provide 

feedback. Overall, I created 24 such learning objects.  

 

My plan sounded perfect. If you have seen the meme created by Renea Frey on pandemic 

pedagogy as a horse (Ball, 2020), I was ready to saddle it from behind. The urgently 

created resources may not have been perfect, but they followed all the available advice on 

creating online teaching materials: the videos were short and simple, they were linked 

together with meta-instruction, and included exercises. The Xertes were shared with 

students via their lecturers who disseminated the link in advance of the session. Students 

were asked to engage with them and note any questions or themes for further elaboration. 

And then real teaching happened. The live sessions were meant to target specific issues 

but most students came unprepared – they either did not watch the resources or had 

engaged with them only superficially. Their individual needs had often not been defined 

before the session even though it was timed around their deadlines. Most cameras were 

https://xerte.org.uk/index.php/en/
https://kairos.technorhetoric.net/24.2/loggingon/index.html


Syska     When the flipped classroom disappoints:  
  engaging students with asynchronous learning 
 

 
Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, Issue 22: Compendium October 2021  3 
 

off and active participation was limited, with the success of a workshop highly dependent 

on the cohort dynamic. I was aware that distance learning had been shown to increase 

student passivity (Rakes and Dunn, 2010) and requires much higher levels of intrinsic 

motivation (Deci and Ryan, 2000). I was not prepared, however, for the extent to which I 

would have to become the sole engine in the effort to engage participants. 

  

The initial failures and disappointments were perhaps inescapable, but served as a good 

reminder of our vulnerability as teachers. As Freire put it, ‘making mistakes is . . . part of 

the discovery process. . . . Error is precisely what makes us learn’ (2007, p.31). Over time, 

I developed a range of different strategies, with the most successful one guided by the 

principle ‘give them what they want’, as I capitulated and delivered more content 

synchronously. 

 

In the age of numbers and metrics, the approach may seem like a success. The 24 

learning objects were accessed 1,423 times, although it is not possible to determine the 

level of engagement with them. 61 students provided feedback, rating the Xertes with a 

mean of 4.5 out of 5 stars, with the great majority finding the materials useful, informative, 

and easy to apply. When it came to feedback for the synchronous sessions, the most 

enthusiastically received were either those where cohort dynamic ensured participation or 

those where, in the absence of student preparation, I (re)delivered the content of the 

Xertes. It made little difference whether I used online tools, such as whiteboard, Zoom 

polls, and quizzes or Miro boards – it was the student preparation aspect that seemed 

decisive. My dependence on the flipped classroom was my mistake. 

 

 

Recommendations 
 

Adapting the principle of the flipped classroom to online learning development teaching left 

me with mixed feelings. The initial overarching personal reaction was one of 

disappointment. A lot of work went into the creation of these resources, a lot of dedication 

and excitement even, and this enthusiasm was quickly snuffed out and led to much soul-

searching. Ultimately, I embraced this disappointment and let it bring me ‘to ground’ 

(Whyte, 2019, p.50) so I could experience a productive transformation.  

 



Syska     When the flipped classroom disappoints:  
  engaging students with asynchronous learning 
 

 
Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, Issue 22: Compendium October 2021  4 
 

The fact is that although the flipped classroom did not work in these workshops, students 

did use the resources after the sessions, with the majority of the aforementioned 1,423 

clicks registered afterwards. So ultimately, the Xertes fulfilled their role as a form of 

asynchronous learning, if not as the ‘pre-work’ element of the flipped classroom. While this 

aligns with some pre-pandemic findings about the use of videos for flipped teaching in 

learning development sessions (Taylor, 2015; Hancock, 2019), what I did not appreciate at 

the time was the extent of online fatigue, the alienation experienced by many students, 

and the reluctance to engage with anything extra on top of the basic requirements of a 

module.   

 

The experience exposed my inadequate understanding of flipped learning in the 

emergency online learning development context. As Talbert (2021) warns us, the usual 

assumptions do not apply, especially when it comes to the concept of ‘class time’. What 

we need to be prepared for is disengagement (and resist interpreting it as a sign of non-

learning), while keeping in mind the aims of the session, because it is accomplishing them 

that ensures success. 

 

 

References  
 

Ball, C. (2020) ‘Logging on’, Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy, 

24.2 (Spring). Available at: 

https://kairos.technorhetoric.net/24.2/loggingon/index.html (Accessed: 10 June 

2021). 

 

Barrett-Fox, R. (2020) ‘Please do a bad job of putting your courses online’. Available at: 

https://anygoodthing.com/2020/03/12/please-do-a-bad-job-of-putting-your-courses-

online/ (Accessed: 10 June 2021). 

 

Brown University (2020) ‘Asynchronous strategies for inclusive teaching’, The Harriet W. 

Sheridan Center for Teaching and Learning. Available at: 

https://www.brown.edu/sheridan/asynchronous-strategies-inclusive-teaching 

(Accessed: 10 June 2021). 

 

https://kairos.technorhetoric.net/24.2/loggingon/index.html
https://anygoodthing.com/2020/03/12/please-do-a-bad-job-of-putting-your-courses-online/
https://anygoodthing.com/2020/03/12/please-do-a-bad-job-of-putting-your-courses-online/
https://www.brown.edu/sheridan/asynchronous-strategies-inclusive-teaching


Syska     When the flipped classroom disappoints:  
  engaging students with asynchronous learning 
 

 
Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, Issue 22: Compendium October 2021  5 
 

Deci, E. L. and Ryan, R. M. (2000) ‘The “what” and “why” of goal pursuits: human needs 

and the self-determination of behavior’, Psychological Inquiry, 11(4), pp.227–268. 

https://doi.org/10.1207/S15327965PLI1104_01.  

 

Freire, P. (2007 [1970]) Pedagogy of the oppressed. New York: Continuum. 

 

Hancock, J. C. (2019) ‘“It can’t be found in books”: how a flipped-classroom approach 

using online videos can engage postgraduate students in dissertation 

writing’, Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education. Issue 16, December, 

pp.1-27. https://doi.org/10.47408/jldhe.v0i16.485.  

 

Mazur, E. (1997) Peer instruction: a user's manual series in educational innovation. Upper 

Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. 

 

Rakes, G. C. and Dunn, K. E. (2010) ‘The impact of online graduate students’ motivation 

and self-regulation on academic procrastination’, Journal of Interactive Online 

Learning, 9, pp.78–93. Available at: http://www.ncolr.org/jiol/issues/pdf/9.1.5.pdf 

(Accessed: 10 June 2021). 

 

Talbert, R. (2017) Flipped learning: a guide for higher education faculty. Sterling, VA: 

Stylus Publishing, LLC. 

 

Talbert, R. (2021) ‘Is flipping an online course possible? (Throwback)’, Robert Talbert 

Blog, 16 April. Available at: http://rtalbert.org/is-flipping-an-online-course-possible-

throwback/ (Accessed: 10 June 2021).  

 

Taylor, A. (2015) 'Flipping great or flipping useless? A review of the flipped classroom 

experiment at Coventry University London Campus', Journal of Pedagogic 

Development, 5(3), pp.57-65. Available at: 

https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/30317388.pdf (Accessed: 2 July 2021). 

 

University of Nottingham (no date) The Xerte Project. Available at: 

https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/xerte/resources.aspx (Accessed: 10 June 2021). 

 

https://doi.org/10.1207/S15327965PLI1104_01
https://doi.org/10.47408/jldhe.v0i16.485
http://www.ncolr.org/jiol/issues/pdf/9.1.5.pdf
http://rtalbert.org/is-flipping-an-online-course-possible-throwback/
http://rtalbert.org/is-flipping-an-online-course-possible-throwback/
https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/xerte/resources.aspx


Syska     When the flipped classroom disappoints:  
  engaging students with asynchronous learning 
 

 
Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, Issue 22: Compendium October 2021  6 
 

Whyte, D. (2019) Consolations: the solace, nourishment and underlying meaning of 

everyday words. Edinburgh: Canongate Books. 

 

 

Author details 
 

Alicja Syska is a Learning Development Advisor at the University of Plymouth, where she 

also teaches U.S. History and Visual Culture. She has a Ph.D. in American Studies from 

Saint Louis University, USA, is a Senior Fellow of Advance HE, an ALDinHE Certified 

Leading Practitioner, and an SI/PASS supervisor. Her research interests include using 

visual methods in teaching, developing academic writing within disciplines, and fostering 

LD publishing and scholarship. 

 


	When the flipped classroom disappoints: engaging students with asynchronous learning
	The challenge
	The response
	Recommendations
	References
	Author details