November 18, 2020

Rethinking Virtual Learning With Less Zoom

Unlocking Student Motivation with Gameful Learning

Instructors everywhere face the same uphill climb: getting students to participate meaningfully—especially in online classes. Despite your best efforts, traditional discussion forums can feel more like boxes to check than places for real learning. What’s the antidote? For many educators, the answer is gameful learning.

What is Gameful Learning?

Gameful learning isn’t about turning your classroom into an arcade. It’s about applying the elements of games—clear goals, meaningful choice, and immediate feedback—to academic environments. Platforms like Yellowdig use points, badges, and accolades to recognize real contributions, making participation feel rewarding, not obligatory.

Why Gameful Elements Spark Engagement

Why do students respond so well to this approach? Because gameful mechanics tap into motivation in ways that rote assignments can’t. When students earn points for thoughtful posts or insightful replies, they're encouraged to dig deeper and share experiences. A little friendly competition doesn’t hurt, either—leaderboards spark engagement and help shy students ease into participation.

Yellowdig’s Approach: More Than Just Points

Yellowdig’s platform is built around the idea that engagement should be authentic, not forced. Points aren’t given for empty “I agree” comments, but for contributions that spark conversation and critical thinking. Students can curate their posts with articles or videos that interest them and receive recognition when others interact with their content. This approach fosters intrinsic motivation—students participate because they want to, not because they have to.

Real Results in Real Classrooms

Instructors using Yellowdig consistently report stronger participation and deeper discussion. One faculty member noted that “seventy-five percent of student questions get answered by their peers,” freeing up their time to tackle more advanced topics. Students say they look forward to checking new posts, sharing resources, and earning recognition for meaningful contributions.

Tips for Making Gameful Learning Work

  1. Set Clear Expectations: Let students know how points are earned and celebrate thoughtful interaction, not just frequency.
  2. Offer Meaningful Feedback: Use accolades and comments to highlight particularly insightful posts.
  3. Encourage Creativity: Remind students they can use links, visuals, or even short videos to make their posts stand out.
  4. Foster Healthy Competition: Leaderboards and weekly challenges can energize participation and keep momentum going.

The Takeaway

Gameful learning turns participation from a chore into an opportunity for discovery and community. With the right design, recognition, and tools, you’ll see students take more ownership of their learning—unlocking not just better engagement, but genuine excitement for the subject.
Ready to see how gameful learning can transform your course? Try out Yellowdig and join a thriving community that believes learning should be as rewarding as it is rigorous.

Way back before a global pandemic in 2020 was nothing more than a plot to a scifi movie, one of my professors needed to host class via Zoom for the first half of the semester for health reasons. As a full time, on-campus student, I thought that was the most exciting thing. Instead of the 2 minute walk to my lecture hall, I could stay in my cozy bed and watch class. I liked participating via the chat function because I never really enjoyed raising my hand in class. But, even with 4 of my other classes being in-person, this format started to get old, and I was happy when she returned to in-person classes.

Fast forward to the last semester of my senior year, Spring 2020, when, as you are well aware, every school turned into “Zoom University.” Every professor did their best and handled it differently, but the common thread was too much Zoom, too little learning.

“Zoom fatigue,” as everyone has come to call it, is definitely a real problem for students and instructors alike. Not only are they exhausted after sitting on Zoom for lectures all day, but then they are also expected to navigate group assignments virtually and complete additional writing assignments due to the remote transition.

In his article “Higher Ed Needs to Go on a Zoom Diet,” Joshua Kim speaks about 3 reasons universities should cut back on zoom:

  1. 1. “Zoom Sucks Energy
  2. 2. Zoom Is Bad for Lecturing
  3. 3. ZoomU May Be Good for the Course, but ZoomU Is Bad for the Learner”

As a recent graduate, I could not agree more with these points. Even as an overachieving student, lectures via Zoom were a recipe for me to miss a lot of content. Although there is not one perfect solution to online learning, I agree with Kim’s argument that utilizing Zoom as more of a small group discussion with minimal lecturing is the most effective use of everybody’s time.

Kim suggests that “For every three hours of class, hold one hour of Zoom.” This suggestion can allow for larger classes to be broken up into smaller Zoom calls, which can help students have more opportunity to participate and get their questions answered.

With all of the problems we just discussed looming around overusing Zoom, there are many opportunities in the education technology market for companies to create value for educators.

Some companies like Engageli and ClassEDU have emerged to better fulfill educational needs that Zoom has left unfilled. As described in “These companies are redesigning ‘Zoom University,’” both companies have different approaches to making video conferencing more tailored to the education space. The problem I see is that no matter how many features you add to Zoom or create in a new platform, students will still struggle to be engaged in a long video meeting, making Kim’s earlier recommendation still stand.

Moving Forward in this Remote World

Thinking outside of the synchronous box, there are many opportunities for professors to create a connected and engaged class. That is where I see Yellowdig fitting in. Students need the ability to interact with each other to deepen their learning, and that just can’t authentically happen over a synchronous Zoom call with 100 participants. To bridge that gap, professors can set up a Yellowdig Community as a way for students to interact in many different ways throughout the week:

  • A getting to know you opportunity with sharing introduction videos

  • A discussion forum to share thoughts about current articles and class topics

  • A help forum for students to ask questions and get help from their peers

  • A way to network with guest speakers you bring into the class

Using tools like Yellowdig to enable students to engage outside of a synchronous discussion not only can cut down on Zoom fatigue, but can also help students feel more connected despite being potentially isolated remotely.

The unique opportunity that Yellowdig provides professors is the ability to try out the platform without the whole university deciding to adopt the technology. We currently have a no-cost pilot for professors to get started next semester, and we are beginning to offer other payment models for individual instructors to be able to adopt Yellowdig without the entire university needing to adopt it.

The Big Takeaway from an Unexpected Semester of Virtual Learning:

Just because Zoom was the easy solution for universities right when the pandemic started, doesn’t mean that is the only option going forward. It is definitely valuable when used in moderation, but finding new and creative ways to supplement your Zoom time is the key to running an effective fully online or hybrid class next semester.

Brianna Bannach is a Growth Marketing Associate at Yellowdig. Brianna graduated in May of 2020 from the University of Delaware with a degree in Entrepreneurship and Technology Innovation.

Keep reading
Yellowdig
Want a Yellowdig Community that doesn’t suck? Follow our best practices.

In 2020, we created a composite Community Health metric that captures four key dimensions of student engagement and achievement. Along the way, we confirmed something we already knew: instructors who use many of our best practices have Communities that perform significantly better than instructors who use fewer. Over the past 3 years, we’ve continued to […]

Product Updates
Yellowdig Engage Product Update 2/19

Features: Password complexity checking. This strengthens the security of users’ accounts. Post reply-to threading UI. This distinguishes replies to comments from replies to posts, making it easier to read and track long conversations. Avatar hover card. This allows users to follow and directly message each other by hovering over their picture in the feed. Interactive […]

Student Success
The Textbook’s Crumbling Monopoly

But that is no longer the case today. The textbook’s monopoly on knowledge is crumbling (if it hasn’t already). Scan any university campus or peek in on any dorm room and you will see fewer books. Why? Well aside from the astronomically inflated cost of textbooks at campus bookstores, the model in which students acquire […]

See Yellowdig in Action Today

Experience how effortless engagement and real community can transform your classroom or campus. Book your personalized walkthrough—no pressure, just real results.