Compulsory distance education has always sought to be inclusive,
providing educational opportunities for K-12 students unable to
attend mainstream, face-to-face schools for medical, geographical,
or personal reasons. However, how to effectively engage these
diverse learners has remained a perpetual challenge, with a need
for further investigation into the nature of student engagement
with compulsory school distance contexts and how teachers can
best support it. This qualitative study used focus groups (n = 2
groups, n = 16 participants) to examine teacher definitions and
student engagement strategies within eKindy-12 distance
education in Queensland, Australia. Categorical analysis was
conducted using a priori codes for definitions, focusing on four
previously established engagement types (i.e. behavioural,
emotional, cognitive, and agentic engagement), and in vivo codes
for strategies. Teacher definitions focused strongly on behavioural
engagement, but most also contained elements of emotional and
cognitive engagement; agentic engagement was only occasionally
evidenced via practice descriptions. Teachers described engaging
students by: building relationships, creating a safe classroom
environment through differentiation, using inclusive technological
tools to facilitate interaction and monitor progress, making learning
fun and relevant, drawing on school-wide pedagogical frameworks
and teaching strategies, and encourage self-regulation. Findings
suggest distance education teachers face unique challenges around
evidencing engagement and supporting student agency.