Also, I'd be interested in strategies for hybrid (online and offline) courses) people have found useful.
I'm teaching a hybrid for the first time this semester. I thought it would be easy because I've taught the class a million times both fully online and in the classroom with web stuff as supplements. Well, it's been something of a disaster! So apparently I have no useful strategies, but I can tell you my mistakes and you can learn from them.
For context, this is an intro level lecture course, about 50 students. We're replacing 1/3 of class time with online time.
My mistakes big mistake is that I have same expectations (exams/quizzes) for students but less class time to help them get there. Plus, to substitute for the missed class time (1 day per week) they have the additional burden to do online discussions. I constantly feel like I'm trying to catch up after having to cancel a day of class--I mean I feel like I have to rush lecture and skip the fun stuff and just go through everything. If I were to do it again I would:
a. Make the "extra" online work lighter. And make it do more to directly prepare students for the exams.
b. Require that they log in during the first week of class. Well, I did require that, but did not follow through-- Students who don't "attend" both in the classroom and online should be dropped at the end of week 2. (Need to get rid of students who are just not able or motivated to do the online component. If they can't log in by the end of the 2nd week, that's a bad sign!)
c. Spend more time in class on a regular basis reminding them about their online assignments.
Also, during registration students seemed to be avoiding my hybrid class (thought it's at a popular day/time, it didn't fill until the last minute, unlike my other sections) so I wonder if the whole problem is that I got the late-registering students (who tend to be slackers) and/or students who didn't want a hybrid in the first place but got stuck with it. Many didn't even know it was a hybrid and the computer/online aspect isn't up their alley.