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LEARNING ABOUT LEARNING

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Title: LEARNING ABOUT LEARNING


1
LEARNING ABOUT LEARNING
  • Learning Communities in Higher Education

2
A Note to presenters
  • This module is intended for a 90-minute class
    session.
  • The emphasis is on active audience engagement.
  • Module modifications are encouraged to meet
    specific needs.
  • A campus may wish to remove the Howard
    Experience slides and insert information and
    data on learning communities experiences on their
    own campus.
  • Whatever changes are made, presenters are
    encouraged to keep with the following general
    structure
  • Opening Activity (to emphasize differences
    between lecture and active learning formats) 30
    min
  • Learning Community Concepts 15 min
  • Interdisciplinary Activity (to encourage
    participants to appreciate and value other
    disciplinary perspectives) 20 min
  • The Howard Experience 15 min
  • Module Evaluation 10 min

3
The Importance of Statistics (An Activity)
  • Critical in all disciplines
  • Required when it is not possible to directly
    observe or measure all values
  • Health statistics ? collecting data on an entire
    population not feasible
  • Business statistics ? collecting data from every
    company not feasible
  • Transportation statistics ? collecting data on
    every vehicle not feasible
  • Three fundamental concepts (central tendency,
    dispersion, and testing)

4
Central Tendency
  • Describes the data center
  • Principal measure average or mean

5
Dispersion
  • Describe how far data spread from the center
  • Principal measure variance (s2) or standard
    deviation (s)

6
Testing
  • Known as hypothesis testing
  • Confirms statistical significance difference
  • Many different types of tests
  • Our focus t-test

7
Applying the t-test
  • Form a null hypothesis
  • Determine the alternative hypothesis (one-sided
    or two-sided)
  • Compute test statistic (t)
  • Compare test statistic
  • To reject or not to reject that is the question!
  • (Distribute Homework Assignment)

8
The Importance of Statistics (A REVISED Activity)
  • The Graduate School at Howard is interested in
    demographic information about its students
    pursuing careers in academia.
  • What is the average age of PhD students?
  • Does the average age vary by disciplinary area?
  • Collecting data on every PhD student will take
    too much time and money
  • The Graduate School has decided to use a sample
    of students to estimate answers to the questions
    posed this requires STATISTICS!

9
The Importance of Statistics REVISED
  • This class is the sample!
  • Write your age on a Post-it note and place in the
    appropriate area for your disciplinary group.
  • Group 1 Science (Biological, Physical,
    Chemical), Engineering, and Mathematics
  • Group 2 Social Science Liberal Arts

10
The Importance of Statistics REVISED
  • FIRST, find the overall mean (average age) for
    all students.
  • SECOND, find the mean and standard deviation for
    each group.
  • THEN, test the hypothesis that the means for the
    two groups are equal.

(two-sided)
11
The Importance of Statistics
  • Activity 1 versus Activity 2
  • Activity 1 typical classroom (lecture
    out-of-class work)
  • Activity 2 students actively involved in class
    (lecture interspersed in activity)

12
Module Objectives
  • To encourage faculty and future faculty to use
    innovative teaching methodologies and make
    students active learners and critical thinkers.
  • To introduce faculty and future faculty to
    learning community concepts and benefits, both as
    participants and facilitators.
  • (Complete submit the pre-test in your class
    materials.)

13
LEARNING COMMUNITY CONCEPTS
  • The Fundamentals

14
What is a Learning Community (LC)?
  • An intentional restructuring of students time,
    credit, and learning experiences to build
    community, enhance learning, and foster
    connections among students, faculty, and
    disciplines. (Smith, MacGregor, Matthews,
    Gabelnick, 2004)
  • Interdisciplinary group of students, faculty, or
    staff
  • Working to enhance student learning and
    achievement
  • Incorporated in any LC are diversity, culture,
    communication, teamwork, structure and local
    community connection

15
The Need for Learning Communities
  • Lecturing is predominant form of teaching is it
    effective?
  • Key to learning is activity, time on task, and
    social interaction wit others, the active use and
    testing of information and ideas, and the active
    practicing of skills in a meaningful context.
  • Major challenges in higher education
  • maximize learning
  • account for what is learned
  • Regional accreditation agencies require
    institutional assessment strategies with student
    learning focus

16
The Need for Learning Communities Cont
  • Focus on learning requires shift for teaching and
    learning
  • Learning can be improved by
  • Use of technology
  • Removal of interdisciplinary barriers
  • Linking communication with coursework
  • Cultivating a sense of community with shared
    knowledge and shared knowing

17
The Need for Learning Communities Cont
  • Retention in LC is high because students are
    active participants in their education
  • Assessment of LC concluded that community was the
    key variable in determining successful learning
    (FIPSE)

18
Types of Learning Communities
  • Learning Organizations - institutions designed to
    create a unique learning environment
  • Faculty LC - faculty groups committed to
    improving teaching and learning
  • Student LC cohort of students enrolled in
    common classes, actively engaged in their learning

19
How is a LC Started?
  • Linked Activities
  • Linked Courses
  • Seamless Courses
  • Common Cohort
  • Common Interest

20
Linked Activities
  • Cross-class dialogues planned by instructors
    teaching separate courses
  • Fairly easy to plan and execute
  • Require no changes in instruction or
    administration
  • Collaboration needed for co-planning of lecture
    and for co-learning
  • Accomplish faculty camaraderie and integration of
    curricula

21
Linked Courses
  • Semester-long coordination of collaboration
  • Courses may be taught separately, but co-planned
    to emphasize parallels and reinforce joint skills
    and concepts
  • Co-enrollment required
  • Co-teaching beneficial
  • Joint courses focus on co-learning where students
    learn connectedness, team work, other skills

22
Seamless Courses
  • Two or more courses joined in a single program of
    instruction
  • Collaboration efforts include
  • Co-enrollment
  • Co-learning
  • Co-planning
  • Co-teaching
  • Co-assessment
  • This effort reflects a broader philosophy geared
    education, rather than a single discipline

23
Common Cohort Common Interest
  • Faculty can be grouped in a LC by cohort
  • Junior Faculty
  • Engineering Faculty
  • Faculty Teaching Undergraduate Students
  • Faculty with Research Labs
  • Faculty can also be grouped in a LC by interest
  • Using peer teaching in the classroom
  • Applying brain research in graduate classes

24
LC Benefits (Student)
  • Increased learning
  • Improved academic performance (higher GPA)
  • Enhanced academic skills
  • Enhanced involvement and social connectedness
  • Increased retention

25
LC Benefits (Faculty)
  • Increased retention
  • Strengthened faculty interaction
  • Integration and continuity of curriculum
  • Faculty development
  • Broadened knowledge and application of various
    pedagogies

26
LC Challenges
  • Faculty and administrative buy in
  • May require greater administrative, faculty and
    student commitment
  • Possible scheduling conflicts
  • May result in loss of individual disciplines
  • Potential forming of cliques
  • Group participation may not be equal
  • More time in class may be required

27
Do LC Really Work?
  • Wagner College
  • Miami University of Ohio

28
How Inter Is the Disciplinary? (An Activity)
  • Review Case Study
  • Identify disciplines you believe might be
    involved in developing a solution
  • Explain what role those disciplines might play
  • Consider the role someone in your discipline
    might play

29
The Howard experience
Learning Community Concepts
  • Learning Communities for STEM Academic
    Achievement (LCSAA)

30
Goals and Activities
Project Planning
Teaching experiments
Shared Reading
Linked Courses
Interdisciplinary Seminars
31
Teaching Experiments
Pedagogy Course Teacher
Cooperative Learning Molecular Biology Leon Dickson, Ph.D.
Problem Based Learning Comparative Anatomy William Eckberg, Ph.D.
Peer Teaching Intro to Civil Engineering Tori Rhoulac, Ph.D.
32
Cooperative Learning Exercise
  • Setup
  • Molecular Biology class, Dr. Dickson
  • 5 groups, 5 students each
  • 3 hour lab period
  • 15 minute summarizing presentations to the whole
    class on a topic that was previously presented by
    Dr. Dickson
  • Presentations had to make the topic clear and
    understandable for the other students in the
    class
  • QA, Student assessment survey

33
Cooperative Learning Exercise
  • Evaluation
  • Student Assessment Survey questions included
  • Did preparing and participating in this exercise
    improve your understanding of your topic?
  • Did listening to other presentations improve your
    understanding of the topic presented?
  • Which topic do you now understand best?
  • Which topic do you understand least?

34
Results
35
Results
  • R2 for Best Understood v. Best Lecture by
    Instructor 0.117
  • R2 for Best Understood v. Best Presentation by
    Students 0.761
  • Students ranking of their own understanding of a
    topic corresponded more with how well student
    groups presented than with how well the teacher
    presented.

36
Interdisciplinary seminars
37
LCSAA Interdisciplinary Seminar Series
  • Monday, October 17, 2005- How Much Money Will I
    Make?
  • Dr. Walter Lowe, Facilitator
  • Monday, October 31, 2005- Problem-Based Learning
    in Pharmacology
  • Mr. Wayne D. Johnson, II, Facilitator
  • Monday, November 14, 2005- Critical Thinking
    Problem Solving
  • Ms. Monique Peters, Facilitator
  • Monday, November 28, 2005- Applications of
    Genetics, Genomics, Bioinformatics
  • Ms. Andrea R. Allen Dr. Karen Nelson,
    Facilitators

38
Results
  • Q1) The seminar was informative.
  • Q2) I now understand better how the topic can be
    applied specifically to me and my major.
  • Q3) The seminar allowed me to see how science is
    applied in the real world.
  • Q4) By participating in this seminar, I feel a
    part of a learning community of STEM students and
    faculty.

39
Challenges
  • Decline in student attendance and participation
    (Reflection require attendance as course
    requirement)
  • Seminars aim to not cause additional work for
    students participating (Reflection link topics
    to in-class subjects so connections can be
    emphasized beyond 90-minute seminar)

40
Linked courses
41
Precalculus-Biology-Chemistry Link
  • Addition of introductory statistics to
    precalculus as used in Biology 101
  • Emphasis on Biology/Chemistry in applied problems
  • Encouragement to form study groups
  • Use of two semester projects on the interface of
    precalculus and biology or chemistry (in
    precalculus)
  • Class visits by chemistry instructor
  • Classroom teamwork

42
Some end-of-semester survey questions
  • Do you see any problems with having linked
    classes? If so, what are the problems?
  • Would you recommend linked classes to friends who
    may enroll in Howard University next fall?
  • Would you recommend that the university continue
    this effort?

43
Results
44
  • Helping Students through the Perry Scheme of
    Intellectual Development

Shared Reading
45
Shared Reading
  • Focus Perry's Scheme of Intellectual Development
  • Student learning moves through series of fairly
    well-defined phases (delineated by ways they view
    themselves in relation to what they believe
    knowledge to be)
  • Dualism
  • Multiplicity
  • Relativism
  • Commitment in relativism

46
The phases
  • Dualism knowledge is received truth (facts,
    correct theories, and right answers)
  • Multiplicity knowledge is simply a matter of
    opinion
  • Relativism weigh evidence distinguish between
    weak and strong support
  • Commitment in relativism integrate the
    relatively objective, removed, and rational
    procedures of academia with more empathic,
    experimental approaches to all other aspects of
    their lives.

47
Faculty Development
  • Discussed article and implications for STEM
    HBCU in bi-weekly meetings over one semester
  • Also included
  • Teaching experiment reflection
  • Linked course and interdisciplinary seminar
    planning and reflection
  • Teaching module development

48
Evaluation
  • Core Faculty Development Questions 
  • Q11. Technical Skill as a Teacher
  • Q12. Total Effectiveness as a Teacher
  • Q13. Interest in the Teaching Process
  • Q14. Research and Scholarly Interest with Respect
    to Your Discipline
  • Q15. View of Teaching as an Intellectual Pursuit
  • Q16. Understanding of and Interest in the
    Scholarship of Teaching
  • Q17. Understanding Ways to Integrate Teaching
    Research Experience
  • Q18. Perspective of Teaching, Learning, Other
    Aspects of Higher Education Beyond the
    Perspective of Your Discipline

49
Evaluation
50
Module Objectives
  • To encourage faculty and future faculty to use
    innovative teaching methodologies and make
    students active learners and critical thinkers.
  • Have the presentation activities and results
    from Howard helped make the case?
  • To introduce faculty and future faculty to
    learning community concepts and benefits, both as
    participants and facilitators.
  • What is a learning community?
  • What are benefits of participation?

51
Course Module Evaluation
  • Complete and submit post-test.
  • Please also complete an evaluation form.
  • Thank you for participating!
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