When I started teaching, evening classes were relatively popular with adult students. They were my favorite classes to teach; I used to ask to teach one every semester. Students who had jobs and kids came to class on a mission—they weren’t there to put up with nonsense. In the evening classes, student discipline was never an issue; the older students would shoot the death stare at younger students who got off track, and that was that. All I had to do was teach. I loved it.
Over the years, though, online courses largely supplanted evening and weekend classes. Online courses took drive time out of the equation, and in the case of asynchronous ones, they offered much greater flexibility to accommodate shifting demands from jobs and families. As online classes grew and improved, the argument from convenience came to disfavor on-site evening classes. Doing classwork after the kids are in bed means not having to arrange childcare. The advantages are real. As broadband access improved and instructors gained more experience with online classes, the shift became a rout. COVID finished the job, but the decline had been well underway long before the pandemic.
A few specialized programs can still support evening classes, but they really aren’t what they used to be.
Which raises the question of what they could be instead.
At a conference earlier this week, one of my counterparts mentioned hearing of a “dinner and a degree” program at which a college hosts regular dinners and provides childcare one night a week for students to come in and take a class or two. The idea was to build a community of (mostly) older students by meeting their practical needs as parents while also running classes.
Yes, there’s still drive time, but using hybrid delivery to get the in-person meetings down to one a week and making that one night a family event could make the drive worthwhile.
And I thought, hmm.
The older model of running the same format of in-person classes at night may have become largely obsolete. But that doesn’t have to mean that evening classes have to go the way of the typewriter. It might be an argument for running evening classes in different formats.
In colleges with music and theater programs, for instance, rehearsals and performances are often at night, because that’s when they can find audiences. At a previous college, campus security sometimes had to chase architecture students out of their studios in the wee hours because the students were building models, got in the zone and lost track of time. I always found that hopeful. It’s easier to lose yourself in a creative project when the night stretches out before you.
This one is really a question for my wise and worldly readers. Have you seen, or can you think of, a way of running classes or programs that would be likely to thrive in an in-person format on evenings and/or weekends? If so, please let me know at deandad (at) gmail (dot) com. I’ll share the most promising ones in a future column. Thanks!
