Lecturing Well

25
Lecturing well: an evidence-based approach Tim Dornan, Maastricht University Rachel Ellaway, Northern Ontario School of Medicine Janet Tworek, University of Calgary

description

Lecturing Well. Workshop presented at AMEE 2012 in Lyon, France. Aug 18, 2012. Shared under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

Transcript of Lecturing Well

Page 1: Lecturing Well

Lecturing well:an evidence-based approach

Tim Dornan, Maastricht University

Rachel Ellaway, Northern Ontario School of Medicine

Janet Tworek, University of Calgary

Page 2: Lecturing Well

Overview

• Introduction• Group Work Session 1• Plenary feedback (mind map)• Summary of OTME chapter• Group Work Session 2• Report: Personal change to practice

Page 3: Lecturing Well

Lecturing is one of the most widely criticized educational methods

… and still one of the most widely used

…. and still one of the less well-understood

Page 4: Lecturing Well

Thematic Review

• Oxford Textbook of Medical Education

• Chapter on ‘Large Group Teaching’

• Thematic review: realist principles

• Program theory from key texts:– McLeish, J. (1968). The Lecture Method.

– Bligh, D.A. (1971). What's the Use of Lectures?

Page 5: Lecturing Well

Program theory

• Large group teaching :

– involves interacting with learners’ cognitive states

– involves a sequence of distinct activities

– involves participating in the discourse of a particular

domain

– is both an educational method and a systematic approach

to program delivery

– is constructed by the affordances of available technologies

– is constructed by the affordances of the educational

ecologies in which it takes place

– involves a broad range of activities

Page 6: Lecturing Well

Methods

• Search ERIC, EMBASE, EBSCOHost, and PsychInfo

databases for “large group teaching”, “lecture”, and “large

group learning” - 1193 papers published between 2002

and 2011

• included in the evidence synthesis if:

– 15+ participants with faculty member leading session

– empirical research in health professions education

– context and intervention were sufficiently well described

– findings judged 3 or higher on the BEME 1-5 scale for

“strength”

Page 7: Lecturing Well

Synthesis

• evidence synthesis followed realist principles

• seven themes used as a program theory of how large

group teaching works, for whom, and under what

conditions.

• coding these papers expanded program theory into 17

free-text coding fields

• coders identified trustworthy (using the BEME strength

scale) causal links between one or more conditions or

processes, and outcomes

• Minor changes to program theory

Page 8: Lecturing Well

Seven Themes

Large Group Teaching:

• involves a sequence of distinct activities

• involves interacting with learners’ cognitive states

• involves participating in the discourse of a particular domain

• is both an educational method and a systematic approach to

program delivery

• is constructed by the affordances of available technologies

• is constructed by the affordances of the educational ecologies

in which it takes place

• can take many more forms than traditional and didactic lectures

Page 9: Lecturing Well

Large Group Teaching involves a sequence of distinct activities. 1

Page 10: Lecturing Well

1Teacher builds presentation

Teacher gives presentation

Learner attends presentation

Learner applies in practice

Page 11: Lecturing Well

1Preparation

Design skills

(For lecturers): mastering the subject matter; defining clear objectives and scope; using novel elements and case-based examples; rehearsing

(Kessler et al, 2011)

Page 12: Lecturing Well

1Presentation

Performance skills

Attention spans typically 8-15 minutes– Break presentation into sections– Provide activities, stories, changes in pace– Asking learners to answer questions, find

information, or read material before the event

(Cain et al 2009; Canfield 2002; Gulpinar & Yegen 2005; Johnson 2005; Van Dijken et al. 2008)

Page 13: Lecturing Well

1Follow up

Evaluate and improve

Lecturers: Review evaluations & iterate (Bligh, 1971)

Students: consolidate notes, complete assessment, participate in post-lecture synthesis activities (Rong et al, 2011)

Page 14: Lecturing Well

2Large group teaching involves interacting with learners’ cognitive states

Page 15: Lecturing Well

2Ellaway, R, Tworek, J and Dornan, T (2013). Large Group Teaching. In The Oxford Textbook of Medical Education, Walsh, K (Ed). Oxford University Press: in press.

Knowledge Transmission (Powell, 1970)

(Kessler, Dharmapuri and Marcolini, 2011; Copeland, Longworth, Hewson and Stoller, 2010)

Be Engaging

Visual Imagery; Concept Maps

(Cosgrove et al, 2006; MacNeil, 2007)

Cognitive principles

(Brown and Manogue, 2001; Canfield, 2002; Gülpinar and Yegen, 2005; Hartley and Cameron, 1967; Johnson and Mighten, 2005; ; Melamed et al. 2006; McKeachie, 2006; Richardson, 2011; van Dijk et al, 2001)

Page 16: Lecturing Well

Lecturing allows learners to participate in disciplinary discourses 3

Page 17: Lecturing Well

What is said may be less important than

how it is saidor

who says it 3

Page 18: Lecturing Well

Large group teaching is both an educational method and a systematic approach to program delivery 4

Page 19: Lecturing Well

4Lecturer

Students

1 event : many studentsLimited points of preparationMinimal evaluations

1 event : much infoLimited preparationMinimal evaluations

Page 20: Lecturing Well

Large group teaching is constructed by the affordances of available technologies 5

Page 21: Lecturing Well

5(Tulsky et al, 2011; Ventura and Onsman, 2009; Williams et al, 2011)

Page 22: Lecturing Well

6Large group teaching is constructed by the affordances of the educational ecologies in which it takes place

Page 23: Lecturing Well

6Ecology

(Kao, 1976)

learning ergonomics

instructional ergonomics

educational efficiency

ergonomics of

educational facilities

ergonomics of

educational environment

ergonomics of

educational equipment

Page 24: Lecturing Well

7Large Group Teaching can take many more forms than traditional and didactic lectures

Page 25: Lecturing Well

MOOCsAnalytics?

(de Waard et al. 2011; Kop, Fournier, & Mak 2011)