To be successful as an online English teacher or school owner you need to maximize attendance and student retention.

This is what ESL education looks like today for many students and teachers

(or ELT, EFL, TEFL, TESL, English education…) Many students all over the world

are feeling down and depressed. They’ve lost motivation to learn English and

it’s becoming increasingly more difficult to keep them motivated and inspired.

This is having a negative effect on how often students come to class and how

long they continue coming.

Students learning English often give up
Why do students learning English lose motivation and give up?

Your English school can do better.

For many English teachers and schools, things were humming along

nicely and then BAM! Covid-19 sent us all packing for our home office.

Overnight online education became the norm.

Sending old-school teachers into a panic, their classes into disarray, and

learners into a frustrating, lonely world.

Students were left thinking and asking. “What am I supposed to do next? How

am I doing? What’s the goal and purpose of this/that activity?”  

Not to mention the social component was completely lost.

How did it come to this? 

Technology should maximize student learning potential by integrating the

most effective methods, tools and science available. Yet the education sector

has been the slowest to adopt and embrace technology.

As a result, instead of being ready for COVID, many were left scrambling to use

technology in some or any form. Many of the tools and activities served no real

educational purpose. They really didn’t help students move forward or give

them a real sense of accomplishment.

Instead students were left without clear goals or purpose. Student anxiety and

depression are up and motivation to learn English is down.

Why are we so behind?

How could the education industry have been caught so off guard? More

specifically, how could English schools have been caught so off guard?

Why have so many English schools been so reluctant to offer hybrid

solutions? Organized institutions have hurdles and hoops with politics and

bureaucracy, and so it’s easier to see how and why. I didn’t say understand, but

just see how and why. English teacherpreneurs and schools though … they

have no excuse. 

– Doesn’t it just make more sense to have a learning management system that

is stacked with proven methods and techniques to optimize student learning

potential?

– Doesn’t it just make sense to offer students the choice to take English classes

in person or remotely?

– Doesn’t it just make sense to appeal to 21st century learner preferences and

expectations?

What do 21st-century English language learners expect?

English language learners expectations

21st century learners expect a lot!

For one, we are accustomed to instantly finding things out (think Google). If we

want a new recipe, we Google it. If we have a disagreement with a friend, we

Google the answer. Within seconds we “learn” things.

This is called micro-learning and it’s completely changed how many people

approach learning. And for a number of good reasons.

1. You can learn something quickly.

2. You can learn things that you’re interested in.

3. For almost anything you Google, there are images which help you visualize

and remember things.

4. For almost anything you Google, you have the choice between reading

about it or watching a video. And guess what? Most people choose video. The

interesting thing to keep in mind here is that visual aids actually help us

remember things. This holds especially true for facts and … vocabulary.

What about that “Magic English Pill”?

Learn English with the magic English pill

Twenty-first century learners also expect results. They expect the “magic pill”

effect. Why? Because technology has made everything so much easier to do.

Though there’s still no “magic pill” for learning English, there are things that

help make your students feel they are making progress. Progress lines that

are a part of most learning management systems are a great example of this. 

They let us know immediately how far we’ve progressed and how far we have

to go to complete something. There’s no guesswork.

Micro-interactions are another example. Micro-interaction is just a fancy term

for those things that pop up on the screen and tell you that you’ve completed

something. For example, a thumbs up, or a badge. Micro-interactions provide 3

main purposes:

1. They communicate status and provide feedback

2. They help people to see the results of their actions

3. They enhance our sense of control that we have over actions

I for one, love micro-interactions and many argue that they’re the reason so

many people love learning apps like Duolingo (enter the little waving owl!)

Last, but definitely not least …

And of course there’s gamification. Everything is gamified these days. We earn

points for this, awards for that. Badges for this and stamps for that. We’ll go

into detail for all of these, but start putting some thought into these.

These are just a few of the things that can make a significant impact on

whether your students come to tomorrow’s lesson or they give up. It can

influence whether they quit today or continue learning English. 

Incorporating these things in your lessons, courses and system will make a

significant difference in how often students come to classes and how long

they continue to study for. Find ways to keep them engaged outside of the

classroom and feeling like they are moving forward.

We would love to talk with you about your English teaching goals and how

Pocket Passport can make your educational goals a reality.

Almost forgot!  We have tons of FREE high frequency vocabulary materials

that are sure to boost student scores on the TOEIC, IELTS and other exams.  

Check out how Pocket Passport can help make your teaching goals-and your

students dreams a reality. And also very importantly how your class

occupancy and student retention can be higher.

There are lots of things to think about when making rules for your school.

 

In this blog, I’ll cover 5 things that every English school should think about

when making rules for class reservations. Specifically I’ll touch on what you

need to think about when making rules for when and how often students can

cancel their lesson. Also, what types of lessons they can take if they’re allowed

to take makeup lessons.

 

The answers to these questions really depend on the type of classes that you

are offering.

 

Remember, if you are too lenient, it will negatively affect your bottomline. If

you are too strict, you may scare students away.

 

A lot of what you choose to do also depends on how you market it. I’ve given a

few examples below and will touch on more on this in future blogs.

 

Here are 5 things to get you started!

 

How’s your schedule look?

 

1. Consider your schedule

 

If you’re offering more options to take makeup lessons, will you be able to

cover them?

 

Will you be opening up and offering new lessons or will they be joining lessons

that already exist?

 

If they’re able to join other classes, it might not affect anything. If you’re

creating a new class, how much will it cost you to open the new class? Is it

worth it?

 

Can you monetize it?

 

What extra value does this add for students? What is that added value worth?

For example, creating a super flexible membership level should come at a

premium.

 

How you advertise and market it is also key.

 

Premium: For the super busy businessman/woman, Mom or Dad whose

schedule often changes at the last minute due to responsibilities.

 

Basic: For those who have control over their schedule and come whenever

they want.

 

The way that you advertise and market the different membership types you

have will help your customers decide which tier they fall under. Worded

properly it will also help persuade them into buying one membership over the

other. People want to be looked at in certain ways.

 

How much time do you need to prepare for lessons?

 

2. Consider what goes into planning a lesson

 

How much time is spend tailoring lessons depending on who’s in your class?

 

This is especially important when determining the “How far in advance” rule.

 

This doesn’t affect some teachers, schools and systems.

 

How will the quality of lessons will be affected?

 

Will this reflect in my lessons?

 

How will this potentially be looked at by students? By this last question, if

you’re selling a premium lesson at a premium price and you’re allowing Jane

Doe to sign in for a lesson one minute before it starts … that isn’t going to look

like much of a premium lesson.

 

On the other hand if you’re offering a free conversation lesson, it won’t matter

as much.

 

How many students should I allow to take my class at the

same time?

 

3. Consider occupancy rates

 

Occupancy: What are the maximum number of seats in each class? How many

seats do you have to fill in order to break even?

 

If the maximum number of students per class is 4, how much profit will you

make?

 

“My two cents” tip: Do not try to pack in 10 or 12 students per class. Of course

this depends on the type of class that you’re offering.

 

Yes, there are methods and techniques to maximize student talking time in big

classes. On the other hand, the amount of quality feedback that you (or other

teachers) will be able to give them will be very limited. This does of course

depend on the type of lesson. Conversation based lessons demand more

immediate input and feedback from the teacher than a writing class (which

you can give written feedback after the class) Choose accordingly, but choose

wisely.

 

This is another example of how you might market lessons.

 

For example, “We only allow a maximum of 4 students per class in order to

maximize student talking time. We want to ensure there’s ample time to give

students immediate quality feedback.”

 

How many levels should my school have?

 

4. Consider your curriculum and level structure

 

How many levels does your school have? If you’re just starting out and offer

group classes, go lean.

 

This is an important thing to consider because if you offer makeup lessons,

you need to think about whether they’ll be too challenging.

 

If your school doesn’t have many levels, there will be more challenging going

from one level to next.

 

Generally speaking the more levels you offer, the easier the transition from

one level to the next.

 

However, keep in mind that the more levels you offer, the less likely you may

be to fill the seats until your student numbers increase.

 

The number of classes that you offer should reflect your student

demographics. In other words, how many students are false beginner,

beginner, low intermediate, etc.?

 

If you’re just opening your English school it’s wise to start with 2 or 3 levels

and tell students that you plan to add another level in “x” number of months.

 

There are many more things to consider, but these are 4 things that will get

you started when deciding whether or not students can cancel lessons.

 

As the owner of your English school, you need to define what your rules are.

Every sustainable business that offers a service has rules. 

In order to create value for students and maximize profit, you need to set and stick to the rules. 

One important thing to keep in mind when setting up your school rules is that

one you should only do it once. 

It will hurt your school’s bottomline to change them. Inform your students and

be clear about what the rules are, and only budge in extreme cases. Being a

pushover won’t help you in the long run. 

 

Pocket Passport: Save time, eliminate mistakes and offer value

 

Managing reservations is a lot of work. It can eat up large parts of your day

very quickly. 

 

The Pocket Passport online reservation system is very flexible and is designed

for school owners to create a variety of classes and options to maximize your

class capacity. It gives you options to up sell students on benefits for premium

membership types.

 

Students will pay extra for flexibility. Offer a premium ticket package that

gives students makeup chances if they cancel their lessons. 

 

Another option might be to offer students makeup lessons that are above

and/or below their level. By offering a plan like this, students will have more

options to take makeup lessons.

 

Types of Students and Tickets

 

Note: 1 class = 1 ticket

 

There are typically two types of tickets: Fixed and flexible. 

 

Students with Fixed Tickets come at the same time and the same day every

week. 

 

Students with flexible tickets come whenever their schedule permits and

according to what’s available at your school. 

 

Cancelation Rule & Grace Period

 

The first rule you should consider is your cancelation rule.

 

There are three things to keep in mind here.

 

1. If a student cancels a lesson after this cancelation rule, they will lose their

ticket. For example, if your cancelation rule is one hour before a lesson and the

student cancels their lesson 30 minutes before the lesson, they will lose their

ticket.

 

2. By default, Pocket Passport offers a grace period for flexible tickets. The

grace period is 24 hours. So if a student cancels a lesson 24 hours or one full

day before the cancelation rule they will get their ticket back with no penalty.

 

So for example, if the cancelation rule is set to 60 minutes…

 

– the student can cancel their class 24 hours + the cancelation rule. In this case

it’s 60 minutes or one hour, so the student must cancel their class 25 hours

before the class starts in order to get their ticket back.

 

3. If the student cancels their lesson after the grace period, but before the

cancelation period, the student will get a makeup lesson (if you’re offering

makeup lessons).

 

If you don’t offer makeups, they will lose their ticket completely after the

grace period.

 

Offer value to your students

 

Remember you can create multiple ticket types with Pocket Passport.

 

So for example, your “Basic Plan” might not offer makeup lessons, but your

“Premium Plan” might. If the student didn’t buy the “Premium Plan”, they’ll

lose their ticket when they cancel. If they did buy the “Premium Plan”, they’ll

be able to take a makeup lesson according to your school rules.

 

With Pocket Passport’s flexible reservation system, you can assign different

types of tickets to different students in the same class.

 

 

What are Makeup Level Rules?

 

There are 2 kinds of makeup lessons.

 

Renewable and non-renewable

 

Renewable

 

A renewable makeup lesson means that the student can cancel their lesson

multiple times within the renewable period.

So for example, if you set the renewable period to 10 days, and Angela cancels

her lesson on April 1st, she has until April 11th to make that lesson up.

 

If she cancels her lesson again on April 5th, the expiration date remains the

same: April 11th, BUT she can reserve a makeup lesson again.

 

Non-renewable

 

A non-renewable makeup lesson means students only have one chance to

make up the canceled lesson before they lose it. If they cancel the makeup

lesson when it’s non-renewable, they lose it entirely.

 

Of course, you don’t have to offer any makeup lesson if you don’t want. 

 

Again, this is a great option and up sell to offer your students. Offer 3 types of

packages:

 

1. Basic (no makeup lesson)

 

2. Silver (non-renewable makeup lesson)

 

3. Premium (renewable makeup lesson)

 

NOTE: the makeup level rules are the only rules in school set up that can be

changed.

 

What is the Upward/Downward Rules for Makeup Lessons?

 

Next, let’s look at the upward/downward rule for makeup lessons.

 

If your school allows makeups:

 

a. are they permitted to take makeup lessons in their level only?

 

b. are they allowed to take makeup lessons in classes above and below their

level?

 

If they are allowed to take them in other levels, how many levels above or

below?

 

NOTE: This is JUST another option and level of flexibility. You do not have to

offer makeup lessons above and below their level. However, this is something

that you may experiment with and change as your school grows.

 

What’s the Global Setting in Pocket Passport? 

 

The global setting is for flexible tickets only. The global setting is for schools

who allow students to take lessons in other levels. This is a great option to

offer for students with low or high confidence. This allows the student to view

and reserve lessons in other levels in addition to their own.

 

If your school is set to GLOBAL, this will allow students with normal or monthly

flexible tickets to see and reserve classes in other levels.

 

If this setting is not on, students will not be able to see other other levels.

 

What’s the Advance Appointment Rule?

 

Far in advance rule – how many days in advance are your students allowed to

reserve lessons?

 

How far into the future can they view the schedule. For example, can they see

lessons 30 days into the future?

 

Last minute rule.

 

How many minutes before the lesson can a student reserve the lesson?  If a

student can reserve a lesson right up until the lesson starts, you can just set it

as 1. If students must reserve a lesson 60 minutes before the start of the

lesson, you would set this at 60.

 

The flexibility for students to book right up until the start of the lesson is great

on one hand. On the other hand, if there’s a big gap between student levels at

your school, you may need time to prepare the right lesson material.

 

Final thoughts

 

Before you set your rules, there are things that you should carefully consider.

Check out tomorrow’s blog to learn the top 4 things that every school owner

should consider when setting your school rules.