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Review of Monday closed book

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Identify several 'best practices' in engineering education. ... Jot down a quick list of the 'best teaching practices' you can think of. (1 minute) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Review of Monday closed book


1
Review of Monday (closed book)
  • Individually - What did you learn/ What were the
    objectives? (1 min)
  • With your neighbor (groups of 4) or with the
    whole group (groups of 3) Compare your lists
    and add details (2 minutes)
  • Share with group

2
Engineering Engineering Education
  • Best Practices

Brian Hoyt Timothy Raymond
3
Engineering Design Course Design Analogy
4
Engineering Design Course Design Analogy
 
5
Engineering Design Course Design Analogy
 
6
Best Practices--Outcomes
  • Participants will be able to
  • Identify several best practices in engineering
    education.
  • Apply best practices in the design of their
    courses.
  • Apply learning style theory in the design of
    course material
  • Define the differences between active,
    collaborative, cooperative and problem based
    learning.

7
Your Turn First
  • Jot down a quick list of the best teaching
    practices you can think of. (1 minute)
  • Turn to a neighbor and compare your lists. (2
    minutes)
  • Be ready to share your thoughts with the group.

8
Best Practices
9
Best Practices
10
Outcomes(aka Behavioral Objectives)
  • Should be given to students.
  • Should be
  • Specific
  • Attainable
  • Measurable
  • Linked to a performance time frame
  • Should state the conditions of performance.
  • Should be used to develop assessment measures.

11
Blooms Taxonomy of Educational Outcomes
(Cognitive Domain)
5. Synthesis Propose, create, invent,
design, improve
Words Not to Use Understand, Learn, Know,
Comprehend, Appreciate
12
Why Write Objectives?
  • Identify critical course material
  • organize presentation
  • allot appropriate time per topic
  • Identify delete extraneous course material
  • Facilitate construction of in-class activities,
    out-of-class assignments, and tests
  • assure comprehensive coverage
  • exercise all Bloom levels

13
  • Provide a study guide for students
  • Tell faculty colleagues what they can expect
    students who pass this course to know
  • teachers of follow-on courses
  • new instructors
  • curriculum planning committees
  • accreditation coordinators

14
Suggestions
  • Prepare objectives for every section of every
    course, then prepare or revise course notes.
  • Write objectives to cover all levels of Blooms
    taxonomy.
  • If you cant write an instructional objective for
    a topic, consider deleting the topic.
  • Give objectives to students on first day of class
    or hand them out a section at a time.

15
Best Practices
16
Types
  • Felder/Silverman
  • Learning Style Inventory (Kolb)
  • Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
  • Herrmann Brain Dominance Instrument
  • Perry Type Indicator
  • others

17
The Why?
18
Why Learn Learning Styles?
  • In your color groups - Determine who got up
    earliest today.

19
Why Learn Learning Styles?
  • In your color groups - Determine who got up
    earliest today.
  • The person to their right will be the Note-Taker
    for the group.

20
Why Learn Learning Styles?
  • In your color groups - Determine who got up
    earliest today.
  • The person to their right will be the Note-Taker
    for the group.
  • Note-Taker will record all responses that are
    brainstormed by the group.
  • Take 2 minutes for this.

21
Why Learning Styles are Important
  • Make the learning process more discussable
  • Provides a context for addressing the
    instructorstudent impedance mismatch that all
    too often exists
  • Helps students understanding their own learning
    processes
  • Others

22
Kolb and Learning Styles - The What?
23
2 Main Elements of Learning
  • Perceiving new information --
  • How we take things in
  • Processing new information --
  • How we make things a part of us

24
Perceiving Information
Feeling (Intuitive)
Thinking (Sensing)
25
Processing Information
Doing (Active)
Watching (Reflective)
26
Kolb and Learning Styles
Feeling
Doing
Watching
Thinking
27
Kolb and Learning Styles
Concrete Experience (CE)
Quadrant 4
Quadrant 1
Reflective Observation (RO)
Active Experimentation (AE)
Quadrant 2
Quadrant 3
Abstract Conceptualization (AC)
28
Kolb and Learning Styles
  • Four learning styles
  • 2 for perception
  • 2 for processing
  • Only dealing with the preferred methods of
    perceiving and processing

29
What are Your Preferred Learning Styles?
  • To take the inventory go to
  • http//trgmcber.haygroup.com/LSI/default-new.asp?o
    z157
  • To see the results again later go to
  • http//trgmcber.haygroup.com/LSI

30
The Results
31
The Results
32
Type 1 Learners
  • STRENGTH Innovation and imagination they are
    the idea people
  • GOALS Self involvement in important issues,
    bringing unity to diversity
  • FAVORITE QUESTION Why?
  • PRIMARY CONCERN Personal meaning

33
Type 1 Learners
Like to ....
Dislike ....
  • Integrate experience with self
  • Listen and share ideas
  • View ideas from many perspectives
  • Work for harmony
  • Be personally involved
  • Be innovative
  • Clarify values
  • Timed tests, pop quizzes
  • No student interaction
  • Insensitive teachers
  • Individual work
  • Skill development
  • Lack of thinking time
  • Coverage rather than depth
  • Colorless environments

34
Type 2 Learners
  • STRENGTH Creating concepts and models
  • GOALS Self-satisfaction and intellectual
    recognition
  • FAVORITE QUESTION What?
  • PRIMARY CONCERN Information

35
Type 2 Learners
Like to ....
Dislike ....
  • Integrate observations into what is known
  • Seek continuity
  • Know what experts think
  • Think through ideas
  • Think linearly
  • Work with detail
  • Critique information and collect data
  • Information out of sequence
  • Multiple authorities
  • Pass/fail grading
  • Criticisms
  • Group projects
  • Disorganization
  • Unknown expectations

36
Type 3 Learners
  • STRENGTH Practical application of ideas
  • GOALS To bring view of the present into line
    with future security
  • FAVORITE QUESTION How? (How does it work?)
  • PRIMARY CONCERN Need to try things for
    themselves

37
Type 3 Learners
Like to ....
Dislike ....
  • Integrate theory and practice
  • Test theories and apply common sense
  • Solve "down-to-earth problems
  • Think strategically
  • Use skills
  • Know how things work
  • Reading from books
  • Memorization
  • Confined nature of lectures
  • Lack of application
  • Restricted environments
  • Group work
  • Lack of hands-on work
  • Labs that don't work
  • Written assignments

38
Type 4 Learners
  • STRENGTH Action, carrying out plans
  • GOALS To make things happen, to bring people to
    action
  • FAVORITE QUESTION What if? (What can this
    become?)
  • PRIMARY CONCERN Need to adapt to their own life
    situations to make more of what they learn

39
Type 4 Learners
Like to ....
Dislike ....
  • Integrate experience and application
  • Learn by trial and error
  • Discover new ideas by themselves
  • Get excited by new things
  • Adapt to new situations
  • Reach good conclusions by intuition
  • Take risks
  • Long lectures
  • Teacher-oriented classrooms
  • Standard routines
  • Repetition and drill
  • Assignments without options
  • Knowledge for its own sake

40
The Learning Population
  • Type 1 10
  • Type 2 40
  • Type 3 30
  • Type 4 20

41
What Do We Teach?
  • I teach interpersonal skills! 10
  • I teach what I know! 40
  • I teach what I am! 30
  • I train minds! 20

42
Engineering Faculty Profile
  • Type 1 10 focus on relationship
  • Type 2 50 focus on facts
  • Type 3 30 focus on skills
  • Type 4 10 focus on self-discovery

43
Teaching Styles
  • Type 1-- focus on the personal development of
    students
  • Type 2 -- focus on the transmission of knowledge
  • Type 3 -- focus on promoting productivity and
    competence
  • Type 4 -- focus on encouraging experiential
    learning

44
The Kolb Cycle as a Model for Teaching The
How?
45
The Kolb Cycle
  • Immediate experience (CE) creates a need for
    learning, which
  • transfers to reflective observation (RO) of the
    experience, which
  • is followed by the introduction of concepts (AC)
    to integrate the immediate experience into what
    is known, after which
  • testing is induced (AE), which
  • results in new experiences, so the cycle repeats.

46
Kolb Cycle
Concrete Experience (CE)
I Why?
IV What if?
Reflective Observation (RO)
Active Experimentation (AE)
II What?
III How?
Abstract Conceptualization (AC)
47
Quadrant I
  • Answer the question WHY?
  • Introduce the subject
  • Provide the big picture
  • Provide meaning
  • Generate enthusiasm
  • Show respect and interest
  • Principle role of teacher MOTIVATOR

48
Quadrant I Learning Activities
  • Motivational Stories
  • Simulations
  • Class Discussion
  • Group Discussion
  • Journal Writing
  • Interactive Lecture
  • Group Problem Solving
  • Field Trips
  • Formal Lecture, feeling tone
  • Role Playing
  • Socratic Lecture
  • Discussional Lecture
  • Group Projects
  • Group Experiments
  • Subjective Tests

49
Quadrant II
  • Answer the question WHAT?
  • Provide information to the student
  • Organize and integrate new material
  • Provide time for thinking and reflection
  • Principle role of teacher EXPERT

50
Quadrant II Learning Activities
  • Formal Lecture, thinking tone
  • Lecture with Visual Aides
  • Lecture with Programmed Notes
  • Textbook Reading Assignment
  • Problem Solving by Instructor
  • Demonstrations by Instructor
  • Example Problems from Textbook
  • Independent Research
  • Objective exams
  • Library Search
  • Gathering Data

51
Quadrant III
  • Answer the question How?
  • Provide opportunity for students to apply
    material
  • Help students to develop problem solving patterns
  • Establish a safe learning environment
  • Principle role of teacher COACH

52
Quadrant III Learning Activities
  • Example Problems Worked by Students
  • Homework Problems
  • Guided Labs
  • Computer Simulation
  • Field Trips
  • Objective Exams
  • Laboratory Tests
  • Individual Reports
  • Computer Aided Instruction
  • Lecture with Demonstrations

53
Quadrant IV
  • Answer the question WHAT IF?
  • Provide opportunities for self discovery
  • Provide opportunities for students to share
  • Evaluate performance
  • Principle role of teacher EVALUATOR/REMEDIATOR

54
Quadrant IV Learning Activities
  • Open Ended Problems
  • Problems Prepared by Students
  • Capstone Design
  • Open Ended Laboratories
  • Student Lectures
  • Group Discussion
  • Role Playing
  • Field Trips
  • Student Presentations
  • Subjective Exams
  • Simulations
  • Group Problem Solving
  • Group Project Reports

55
Your Turn The What If?
  • Pick one of the Learning Outcomes you wrote
    yesterday.
  • Write down an instructional activity for each of
    the four quadrants (3 min)
  • Why?
  • What?
  • How?
  • What if?
  • Share your ideas with your group.
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