TLT Symposium 2013 - 21st-Century Teaching - Three Technology-Enhanced Techniques - Oct 2013

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Transcript of TLT Symposium 2013 - 21st-Century Teaching - Three Technology-Enhanced Techniques - Oct 2013

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21st Century Teaching:Three Technology-Enhanced Techniques

@ TLT Symposium 2013

Dr. Jeff LoatsDepartment of Physics

In what (rough) area do you teach?

A) Humanities

B) Natural sciences & mathematics

C) Professions & applied sciences

D) Social sciences

E) Teacher education

…no surer way to offend…

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Outline

Confession of purpose

The evidence standard

Three 21st-century teaching techniques:

• Flipped teaching

• Just in Time Teaching

• Active engagement with classroom response systems

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Blended Learning Initiative (2013)

Common:

Target intro courses with large enrollments(instructors teaching First Year Success courses)

Offer small incentive/acknowledgement (laptop)

Perhaps uncommon:

Invite potential participants (vs. them applying)

Offer a small “menu” of teaching techniques

Sustained support - 6-8 “meetings”1-on-1, small-group meetings, workshops.

The Evidence Standard5

Teachers can feel bombarded…

I strive to be a scholarly teacher …

In a typical day in your class, what fractionof class time is spent on lecture-based delivery of content?

A) 0% - 20%

B) 20% - 40%

C) 40% - 60%

D) 60% - 80%

E) 80% - 100%

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0%

2%

8%

44%

46%(others)

Flipped Teaching7

"the Flipped Classroom isn't a methodology. It's an ideology.“ – Brian Bennet

“Lecture at home, homework in class”

Take the passive delivery portions of traditional teaching and move them online.

Online videos are often “screencasts”, or may be small snippets of recorded lectures.

Students held responsible, directly or indirectly

Flipped Teaching vs. Lecture Capture

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My take:

Capturing an entire lecture has limited benefits. It somewhat extends a passive technique.

The goals of the flipped classroom video conflict with the results of capturing traditional lecture.

Flipped Teaching9

Students held responsible for viewing:

• Directly: JiTT, preparation quiz, notes check…

• Indirectly: Prep. Material is not repeated, value of prep work is made apparent.

Class time is dedicated to problem solving, discussions, applying skills, etc.

Clickers: Very Well Studied10

When used well…

• Quick/easy attendance in large class sizes.

• Everyone participates and retains anonymity

• Encourages active learning

• Improved concentration

• Improved exam scores

• Improved learning and retention

• Efficient use of class time

• Engages students in metacognition.

Technologies vs. Techniques11

Hands

Colored cards

Hardware “clickers”

Virtual response tools

Peer Instruction

Factual recall

Polling/survey

Poll-Teach-Poll

Thought Questions

Teach-Test-Retest

Peer Instruction12

Multiple choice questions

–Conceptual

–Hard

1. Students answer Individually

2. Discussion with peers

3. Students answer post-discussion

4. Class-wide discussion

Students have developed a robot dog and a robot cat, both of which can run at 8 mph and walk at 4 mph.

A the end of the term, there is a race!

The robot cat must run for half of its racing time, then walk.

The robot dog must run for half the racing distance, then walk.

Which one wins the race?

A) Robot cat B) Robot dog C) They tie

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In your teaching do you have a method for holding students accountable for preparing for class?

A)I don’t, but I ask/threaten really well.

B) I use a paper method (quiz, journal, others?)

C) I use a digital method (clickers, others?)

D)I use Just in Time Teaching.

E) I have some other method.

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19%

48%

10%

3%

20%(others)

Just in Time Teaching15

Online pre-class assignments (“WarmUps”)

First half:

• Conceptual questions, answered in sentences

• Graded on thoughtful effort

Learner Teacher

Just in Time Teaching16

Online pre-class assignments (“WarmUps”)

First half:

• Conceptual questions, answered in sentences

• Graded on thoughtful effort

Second half:

• Responses are read “just in time”

• Instructor modifies the plan accordingly

• Aggregate and individual (anonymous) responses are displayed in class.

Learner Teacher

Just in Time Teaching17

A different student role:

• Actively prepare for class(not just reading/watching)

• Actively engage in class

• Compare your progress & plan accordingly

A different instructor role:

• Actively prepare for class with you(not just going over last year’s notes )

• Modify class accordingly

• Create interactive engagement opportunities

Learner Teacher

Consider a typical day in your class. What fraction of students did their preparatory work before coming to class?

A) 0% - 20%

B) 20% - 40%

C) 40% - 60%

D) 60% - 80%

E) 80% - 100%

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28%

33%

21%

11%

7%(others)

Student Feedback19

315 students in 7 classes over 4 terms (roughly ±6%)

The WarmUps have…Agreed or

Strongly Agreed

…helped me to be more prepared for class than I would otherwise be. 70%

…helped me to be more engaged in class than I would otherwise be.  80%

…helped me to learn the material better than I otherwise would 64%

…been worth the time they required to complete 57%

More on JiTT!20

Much more information to be had:

• Theoretical basis for effectiveness

• Empirical evidence for effectiveness

• Writing good questions

• Best and worst implementation tools

• Practical questions and pitfalls

My Summary21

These three technology-enhanced teaching techniques are:

• Applicable to any discipline

• Compatible with nearly any teaching style

• Evidence based

• Worth your consideration!

Your Summary22

For yourself… or to share next time

What was the biggest shift in your thinking during this discussion?

What is the biggest question you are left with?

Contact Dr. Loats: Jeff.Loats@gmail.comToday’s slides: www.slideshare.net/JeffLoats

JiTT References & Resources23

Simkins, Scott and Maier, Mark (Eds.) (2010) Just in Time Teaching: Across the Disciplines, Across the Academy, Stylus Publishing.

Gregor M. Novak, Andrew Gavrini, Wolfgang Christian, Evelyn Patterson (1999) Just-in-Time Teaching: Blending Active Learning with Web Technology. Prentice Hall. Upper Saddle River NJ.

K. A. Marrs, and G. Novak. (2004). Just-in-Time Teaching in Biology: Creating an Active Learner Classroom Using the Internet. Cell Biology Education, v. 3, p. 49-61.

Jay R. Howard (2004). Just-in-Time Teaching in Sociology or How I Convinced My Students to Actually Read the Assignment.  Teaching Sociology, Vol. 32 (No. 4 ). pp. 385-390. Published by: American Sociological AssociationStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3649666

S. Linneman, T. Plake (2006). Searching for the Difference: A Controlled Test of Just-in-Time Teaching for Large-Enrollment Introductory Geology Courses. Journal of Geoscience Education, Vol. 54 (No. 1)Stable URL:http://www.nagt.org/nagt/jge/abstracts/jan06.html#v54p18

Clicker References & Resources

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Banks, D. A. (Ed.). (2006). Audience response systems in higher education: Applications and cases. Hershey, PA: Information Science Publishing.

Hinde, K., & Hunt, A. (2006). Using the personal response system to enhance student learning: Some evidence from teaching economics. In Banks, D. A. (Ed.), Audience Response Systems in Higher Education: Applications and Cases. Hershey, PA: Information Science Publishing.

Martyn, M. (2007). Clickers in the classroom: An active learning approach. EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 30(2), 71-74.(http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/EQM0729.pdf)

Moreau, N. A. (2010). Do clickers open minds? Use of a questioning strategy in developmental mathematics, CAPELLA UNIVERSITY, 2010, 157 pages; 3389211

Poirier, C. R., & Feldman, R. S. (2007). Promoting active learning using individual response technology in large introductory psychology classes. Teaching of Psychology, 34(3), 194-196.

Mazur, E. 2004 ”Introduction to Peer Instruction” talk presented at New Physics & Astronomy Faculty Workshop, 2004, UMD.

Hake, R.R. 1998a. “Interactive-engagement vs traditional methods: A six thousand-student survey of mechanics test data for introductory physics courses,” Am. J. Phys. 66(1): 64-74; (www.physics.indiana.edu/~sdi/ajpv3i.pdf)

Anderson, L., Healy, A., Kole, J., & Bourne, L. (2011). Conserving time in the classroom: the clicker technique. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 64(8): 1457-1462.

Thought Questions: A New Approach to Using ClickersCU Science Education Initiative & UBC Science Education Initiative(http://www.cwsei.ubc.ca/resources/files/CU-SEI_Thought_Questions.pdf)

Clicker Resource Guide from the CU Science Education Initiative & UBC Science Education Initiative (http://www.cwsei.ubc.ca/resources/files/Clicker_guide_CWSEI_CU-SEI_04-08.pdf)

Duncan, D. (2009). Tips for Successful “Clicker” Use. Retrieved January 31, 2009.(http://www.cwsei.ubc.ca/resources/files/Tips_for_Successful_Clicker_Use_Duncan.pdf)

Why Are Clicker Questions Hard To Create?Blog post by Ian Beatty, Science Education Researcher and Professor of Physics at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro(http://ianbeatty.com/blog/archives/100)

Good resource list at Carleton College’s website: http://serc.carleton.edu/sp/library/classresponse/index.html