Facilitating Active Learning - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Facilitating Active Learning

Description:

Paul Ramsden (1992) Learning to Teach In Higher Education ... An Introduction to Effective Teaching in Higher Education, pp.67-68 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:151
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: tfqCit
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Facilitating Active Learning


1
Facilitating Active Learning in Small Classes
Wednesday, 25 January, 2006 Peter Looker
2
  • Outcomes for todays workshop
  • By the end of this workshop you should be able
    to
  • Describe your experience of the small-class
    activities undertaken today in terms of their
    effect on learning
  • Report on the extent, or range, of activities
    either directly experienced or discussed, in
    todays workshop and their appropriateness to a
    range of intended learning outcomes
  • Evaluate and choose teaching and learning
    activities for small classes which are aligned
    with at least one of your intended learning
    outcomes

3
What kind of small-class teaching are you doing
now? Are your small classes part of a range of
different teaching and learning activities, or do
all the teaching and learning activities in your
course consist of small classes? If the former,
what relationship do your small classes have to
your other activities? Do you use problem-based
learning in your courses?
4
Discussion is vital if students are to
understand their subject. Meaning cannot be
conveyed directly but needs to be constructed
within each student. The negotiation of meaning
which takes place in discussion is a very
effective way of constructing meaning. Graham
Gibbs and Trevor Habeshaw, Preparing to Teach An
introduction to effective teaching in higher
education, Chapter 3 Teaching Small Groups
5
  • Small-class teaching is essentially a highly
    active learning experience for all participants,
    and assumes that students clarify their thoughts
    by talking. Students are often critical of
    small group teaching on the basis of poor
    management and the failure to encourage
    participation from all members. small-class
    teaching is most successful when it encourages
    the participation of all members of the groupall
    members of the group should have the opportunity
    to interact with all other members of the group.
  • Craig McInnes, Centre for the Study of Higher
    Education, Melbourne University

6
  • General characteristics of active learning
  • Students are involved in more than listening
  • Less emphasis is placed on transmitting
    information and more on developing students
    skills
  • Students are involved in higher-order thinking
    (analysis, synthesis, evaluation).
  • Students are engaged in activities (e.g.,
    reading, discussing, writing).
  • Greater emphasis is placed on students
    exploration of their own attitudes and values
  • Charles C. Bonwell and James A. Eison (1991)
    Active Learning creating excitement in the
    Classroom. p 2.

7
Some goals of small-class teaching might be the
following
Paul Ramsden (1992) Learning to Teach In Higher
Education
8
  • On the post-it note, write a brief response to
    the following question
  • What I want my students achieve through
    small-class teaching is
  • Beneath this, write one key word that best
    characterises your statement.

9
  • Post-it notes get redistributed.
  • Stick your post-it notes on the board, and
    everyone begin to cluster key words into five
    categories.

10
  • Five minute plenary on the key words.
  • Write down one of your course intended learning
    outcomes.
  • Decide which of the key words is most appropriate
    to the intended learning outcome and join that
    group

11
  • Its what the student does, rather than what we
    do, that brings about a change in learning.
  • Putting this statement together with your groups
    key words cluster of ideas, come up with as
    many responses as you can to the following
    question
  • What range of activities might students undertake
    to achieve the key words? For example, is it
    appropriate to the achievement of the learning
    outcome that they should discuss, reflect, write,
    problem-solve, or a combination of these? (You
    might like to characterise these in the way
    Ramsden does, as examples of skills or thinking.)


12
  • Jigsaw exercise
  • Nominate people from your (home) group to be
    reporters. You should nominate one person for
    each of the other groups.
  • As a reporter, go and investigate the findings of
    your chosen group, by asking the following
    questions
  • What intended learning outcomes are being
    addressed by the key words?
  • What activities have been suggested as
    appropriate for addressing the intended learning
    outcomes?
  • What kind of pedagogical rationale does the group
    have for choosing these strategies?


13
  • Reporting back.
  • Return to your home group, and report your
    findings. Tell them what you think might be
    different about the other groups ideas, and what
    might be similar.
  • Reflection.
  • Everybody spend five minutes writing down your
    reactions (including feelings) about the
    foregoing activities. How has your own approach
    to small-class teaching been informed by the
    activities so far?


14
  • Fishbowl
  • Five people who were not reporters sit in a
    circle to discuss with each other the statement
    below. There is a spare chair for other members
    of the audience to jump in and make a single
    comment contributing to the discussion.
  • In small-class teaching the teacher should
    almost be invisible.


15
  • Final reflection.
  • What is the most urgent question arising from
    todays workshop that you would like to talk over
    with a colleague over lunch tomorrow?


16
  • Quick review.
  • Clustering ideas with post-it notes.
  • Individual reflection.
  • Group brainstorming
  • Jigsaw exercise, including reporting
  • Fishbowl exercise
  • Reflection on what you would like to discuss
    further.


17
  • References
  • Gibbs, G Habeshaw, T. 1989 Teaching small
    groups in Preparing to Teach
  • An Introduction to Effective Teaching in Higher
    Education, pp.67-68
  • Lee, A. Higgs, J. 1988, How to help students
    to learn in small groups,
  • in Coz, K. Ewan, C.E. (eds.) The Medical
    Teacher (2nd edn),
  • Churchill Livingston, Edinburgh, pp.37-47
  • Online resources
  • McInnis, C. Small Group Discussions, Centre for
    the Study of Higher Education,
  • University of Melbourne, URL
  • http//www.cshe.unimelb.edu.au/downloads/small_gro
    up_rev2.pdf
  • Higher Education Academy (UK), especially the
    Subject Network and Resources
  • http//www.heacademy.ac.uk/48.htm
  • University of Queensland, Teaching and
    Educational Development Institute (TEDI)

18
  • Outcomes for todays workshop
  • By the end of this workshop you should be able
    to
  • Describe your experience of the small-class
    activities undertaken today in terms of their
    effect on learning
  • Report on the extent, or range, of activities
    either directly experienced or discussed, in
    todays workshop and their appropriateness to a
    range of intended learning outcomes
  • Evaluate and choose teaching and learning
    activities for small classes which are aligned
    with at least one of your intended learning
    outcomes
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com