Active Learning Strategies


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Active Learning Strategies

Season Your Lectures with Active Learning

  • Michael J. Quinn
  • 1 June 2007

Complete this sentence: Three things I’d like to know about active learning are _________________.

Structure of This Lecture

  • Critiquing lecturing
  • Defining active learning
  • Implementing active learning

Listening Teams

  • Questioners
  • Agreers
  • Nay-sayers
  • Example-givers

I How come the more I talk the less my students learn?

Advantages of Lecturing

  • Spark interest
  • Provide unavailable information
  • Convey large amounts of information
  • Reach large audiences
  • Model ways of thinking
  • Maintain control
  • Protect students
  • Help auditory learners

Disadvantages of Lecturing

  • Passive students
  • Inadequate feedback
  • Flagging attention
  • Poor retention
  • Burden on lecturer
  • Non-auditory learners
  • Source: Sutherland and Bonwell

Students Tune Out

  • Source: Pollio

As lecture continues, retention of new material declines.

  • Source: Johnson, Johnson, and Smith

Retention of New Material

  • Source: McKeachie

Lectures Assume Homogeneity

Listening Teams

  • Questioners
  • Agreers
  • Nay-sayers
  • Example-givers
  • Source: Silberman

II Active learning to the rescue!

Fundamentals

  • Learning is an active process.
  • Different people learn in different ways.
  • We often don’t know what we think until we try to say it or write it.
  • Just because you’ve said it doesn’t mean they’ve learned it.

Genuine Learning

  • Reception
  • Test
  • Recap
  • Explain

Engage More Parts of Brain

  • Talking and listening
  • Reading
  • Writing
  • Reflecting

“When learning is active, students do most of the work” [Silberman].

Counter the Objections

  • “That’s not how I learned the material.”
  • “Active learning is great for children, but college students don’t need it.”
  • “It’s too slow paced— I’ll spend a lot of time watching instead of talking.”
  • “I won’t be able to cover all the material.”

III Fit active learning to your needs and personal style.

Ask Students to...

  • Restate information
  • Give examples
  • Recognize instances
  • Make connections
  • Apply concepts
  • Predict consequences
  • State converse

In-class Writing Assignments

  • Be specific — ask students to
    • analyze – compare
    • contrast – define
    • describe – evaluate
    • justify – prove
    • summarize – synthesize
  • Source: Fulwiler

Learning Partners

  • Compare class notes
  • Discuss an example
  • Solve a problem
  • Critique each other’s writing
  • Question partner about reading
  • Recap lecture
  • Develop questions for teacher
  • Test each other

More Examples

  • Pop quiz (manual or electronic)
  • Response cards (anonymous)
  • Whips
  • Games (Family Feud or Jeopardy)
  • Complete outline of lecture

Use in Moderation!

Complete this sentence: Three different ways I can add active learning to my lectures are ________________.

References

  • Fulwiler, T. Teaching with Writing. Boynton/Cook. 1987.
  • Holt, J. How Children Learn. Pitman. 1967.
  • Johnson, D. W., Johnson, R. T., and Smith, K. A. Active Learning: Cooperation in the College Classroom. Interaction Book Company. 1991.
  • McKeachie, W. Teaching Tips: A Guidebook for the Beginning College Teacher. D. C. Heath. 1986.
  • Meyers, C., and Jones, T. B. Promoting Active Learning: Strategies for the College Classroom. Jossey-Bass. 1993.
  • Pollio, H. R. “What Students Think About and Do in College Lecture Classes.” Teaching-Learning Issues No. 53. University of Tennessee. 1984.
  • Silberman, M. Active Learning: 101 Strategies to Teach Any Subject. Allyn and Bacon. 1996.
  • Sutherland, T. E., and Bonwell, C. C. Using Active Learning in College Classes: A Range of Options for Faculty. Jossey-Bass. 1996.

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