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Creating Effective Team Assignments for Team Based Learning

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Title: Creating Effective Team Assignments for Team Based Learning


1
Creating Effective Team Assignments for Team
Based Learning
Jim Sibley
Link Creating Assignments Workshop Resources
2
Agenda
  • Quick Review of TBL
  • 4 key principles
  • 3 step instructional sequence
  • Application Exercises
  • 3 Ss for TBL exercises
  • Some Examples
  • Developing TBL in-class exercises
  • Facilitating Classroom Discussion
  • Developing facilitation plans
  • Summary, Peer Feedback and Discussion

Link TBL Resources Website
3
Typical TBL Course Objectives
  • Ensure that students master the course subject
    matter
  • Develop student ability to use course concepts in
    thinking and problem solving
  • Prepare students to be life-long learners
  • Develop students interpersonal and team
    interaction skills
  • Have students enjoy the course

Adapted from Michaelsen
4
4 TBL Key Principles
Article Getting Started with Team-Based Learning
by Larry Michaelsen
5
3 Step Instructional Sequence
Readiness AssuranceDiagnosis-Feedback
Application of Course Concepts
Preparation(Pre-class)
1. Individual Study
2. Individual Test
3. Team Test
4. Written Appeals (from teams)
Readings Readiness Assurance Application Exercises
Adapted from Michaelsen
6
Playing to the Strengths of Teams
  • Teams can be good at
  • Making Decisions
  • Arriving at Consensus
  • Discussion of supporting rationales
  • Defense of their decisions
  • We need to develop assignments that play to these
    natural strengths of teams.

7
Team-Based Learning
  • Heterogeneous and diverse teams
  • Clear, specific, and widely shared team goals
    (encourages group cohesion)
  • Sufficiently difficult activities that are
    meaningful.
  • Regular, descriptive, specific, relevant, timely
    and usable peer feedback.
  • Simultaneous reporting to allow immediate and
    simple comparisons of thinking and decisions
    making relative to other teams.

8
In-class Team Application Exercises
Designing Effective Group Activities Lessons for
Classroom Teaching and Faculty Development (pdf)
9
3 Ss of Successful TBL Exercises
Same Problem Individuals and teams work on the
same problem, case or question
Specific Choice Individuals and teams must use
course concepts to make a specific choice
Simultaneous Report Individuals and teams
report their choices simultaneously Visibility
of student thinking important
Link Creating TBL Assignments Workshop Materials
10
Application ExercisesProcess Model
SimultaneousReporting
Complex
Graded
Intra-team discussion
Inter-team discussion
In-ClassProblems
Simple
Practice
Readings and RAP
Individual Homework
Link Creating TBL Assignments
11
Q Which assignment wording would best promote
higher level cognitive skills and team
development?
  • List the mistakes that writer frequently make
    that detract from their efforts to write in an
    active voice
  • Read the following passage and identify a
    sentence that is a clear example of a) active,
    and b) passive voice.
  • Read the following passage and identify the
    sentence in which the passive voice is used
    most appropriately.
  • Make a List List the mistakes that writer
    frequently make that detract from their efforts
    to write in an active voice
  • Make a Choice Read the following passage and
    identify a sentence that is a clear example of
    a) active, and b) passive voice.
  • Make a Specific Choice Read the following
    passage and identify the sentence in which the
    passive voice is used most appropriately.

12
Q Which assignment wording would best promote
higher level cognitive skills and team
development?
  • List the mistakes that developers frequently make
    that detract from their efforts to create well
    normalized database models
  • Review the following database models and identify
    a model that is a clear example of a) poor
    normalization, and b) good normalization
  • Review the following database models and identify
    the model that normalization is used most
    appropriately

Consider impact of using words Best and Worst
13
Assignment Phrasing Affects Individual Thinking,
Intra/Inter Team Discussion
  • Make a list
  • Low cognitive skills
  • Low commitment to output
  • Low accountability
  • Make a specific choice
  • Focuses on why?
  • Higher cognitive skills
  • Higher commitment to output
  • Higher accountability/cohesiveness

Adapted from Michaelsen
14
Exercise Prepare Ministerial briefing notes for
press conference - Should we recommend approval
of GMO crops for use in Canada?
  • Part One
  • Individual Assignment - 2 page briefing note
  • SWOT Analysis
  • Common questions, arguments and answers
  • Part Two
  • Team Assignment - 1 page briefing note
  • Part Three
  • What would your teams recommendation be to the
    Minister?

Simultaneous Reporting
More Application Exercise Examples
15
A patient with a brain stem stroke has collapsed
a lung from intractable hiccups and feed-tube
aspirates. He was admitted to intensive care to
deal with the resulting pneumonia. A few weeks
later the PRN order for Baclofen has expired. The
patient has begun to hiccup again has demanded
Baclofen and is growing increasingly distressed
that nothing is being done. It appears to be a
doctor oversight that it was not renewed. It is
late Friday night of a long weekend and the
doctor on call is not returning the page. The
doctor has been verbally abusive when called on
other occasions.
Baclofen controls the hiccups
PRN patient can request
16
Code of Ethics
A patient with a brain stem stroke has collapsed
a lung from intractable hiccups and feed-tube
aspirates. He was admitted to intensive care to
deal with the resulting pneumonia. A few weeks
later the PRN order for Baclofen has expired. The
patient has begun to hiccup again has demanded
Baclofen and is growing increasingly distressed
that nothing is being done. It appears to be a
doctor oversight that it was not renewed. It is
late Friday night of a long weekend and the
doctor on call is not returning the page.
Patient Intimidation
Doctor/Nurse Relationship
Hospital Policy
Doing the Right Thing
  • As the Charge Nurse, you should

Charting Requirements
  • Do nothing, but continue to attempt to contact
    the doctor
  • Give the patient the pill and note it in the
    chart
  • Give the pill, chart it, and continue calling the
    doctor
  • Mark a pill as spoiled and leave it with the
    patient

17
Application ExercisesDesign
18
Designing Application Exercises
  • 4 Questions to consider when designing TBL
    learning activities
  • What do I want students to be able to do?
  • What will they need to know to do it?
  • What do they already know? (So I dont have to
    teach it)
  • How will I know that they know it?

Larry Michaelsen Video Clip
19
Dreaming up the Assignments
  • Real, authentic problems (from the discipline)
  • Decision will student have to make in the work
    place
  • Practice in problem solving (the strategies of
    the discipline)
  • Can use overly ambitious application question
    from RAPs

20
Dreaming up the Assignments
  • Multi-step problems where consensus decision
    making is modeled within the Teams and between
    the Teams
  • Allows students that may be new to
    problem-solving in the discipline to solve messy,
    complex, multi-stage problems
  • Opportunity to check-in and get peer reassurance
    about their decisions and supporting rationales

21
Assignment Examples
  • Microbial Physiology
  • Kinesiology
  • Aerodynamics
  • Computer Engineering
  • Psychology of Sport
  • Construction Management
  • Mechanical Design

From teambasedlearning.org
22
  • Reporting
  • Numerical Position
  • One page summary principles and approach and not
    calculations (16 pt font or bigger)

Link This Assignment Password tar1n1ng
23
Backward Design
  • Identify desired results
  • Determine acceptable evidence
  • Plan learning experiences and instruction

Worth being familiar with
Important to know and do
Enduring Understanding
Adapted from Wiggins and McTighe, 2000
24
TBL Backward Design
  • Authentic, real problems having enduring value
    beyond the classroom
  • Reside at the heart of the discipline (involve
    doing the subject)
  • Require un-coverage (of abstract or often
    misunderstood ideas)
  • Offer potential for engaging students

Adapted from Wiggins and McTighe, 2000
25
TBL Backward Design
  • Develop case or scenario
  • Consider knowledge required to solve case
  • Write some RAP questions specific to case
  • Write learning objectives that pertain directly
    to the case or scenario
  • helps students focus and prepare
  • Select readings and create reading guides
  • helps students focus and prepare

Adapted from Creating Application Exercises for
Basic Sciences John Pelley
26
Aspects of Good Assignments
  • Production of a tangible output
  • Impossible to complete without comprehension of
    course concepts
  • Sufficiently difficult to eliminate completion by
    an individual member
  • Majority of time engaged in activities
  • Applicable to real world issues or problems
    (pragmatic/applied)
  • Interesting and/or fun (ENERGY is the acid test
    for good exercises)

27
Your TurnExercise Design
  • Pick an authentic problem or scenario from your
    discipline
  • Identify the issues and facts that students would
    have to know and consider
  • Create specific choices that require both the
    understanding and application of course concepts

10 minutes work with partner
15 minutes presentation and feedback
28
Planning Application Exercises Reporting
29
Same Problem Specific Choices Simultaneous
Report
30
TBL Reporting Discussions
  • The Introduction
  • Call attention
  • Motivate students to discuss topic/idea
  • Clarify the purpose of the discussion
  • Explain importance and relevance of topic
  • The Body
  • Call attention to differences in student thinking
  • What questions will be asked to enable students
    to meet objectives (SWOT or ORID)
  • The Conclusion
  • Summarize major ideas developed in the
    discussion tie entire discussion together
  • What are students supposed to take away
  • Preview how knowledge learned will relate to
    topics to be discussed in future classes.

From Developing Strategies for Facilitating
Interactive Classroom Discussion in TBL by Derek
Lane
31
ORID Reporting Model
  • Objective facts, external reality
  • Reflective individuals responses to facts
  • Interpretive significance/meaning for group
  • Decisional application, action, implementation,
    new directions

From The Art of Focused Conversation
32
Problem Solving Models
  • Problem Analysis
  • Ability to Analyze Problem
  • Goal Setting
  • Ability to Identify Appropriate Criteria for
    Decision Making
  • Identification of Alternatives
  • Ability to Develop Alternative Choices
  • Evaluation Positive and Negative Consequences
  • Ability to Evaluate the Positive and Negative
    Aspects of Alternative Choices Prior to Making a
    Decision
  • Order is not important but all must be performed
    well!

From Developing Strategies for Facilitating
Interactive Classroom Discussion in TBL by Derek
Lane
33
SWOT Analysis
  • Strengths
  • Weaknesses
  • Opportunities
  • Threats
  • Provide a clear discussion objective and start
    discussion with controversy

From Developing Strategies for Facilitating
Interactive Classroom Discussion in TBL by Derek
Lane
34
Other Reporting Models
  • 3 Questions
  • What? Descriptive
  • So what? Interpretive
  • Now what? Application
  • 5 Questions
  • How do you feel?
  • What happened?
  • Do you agree?
  • Has this ever happened to you?
  • What if . . .?

35
CORDS Model for Discussion Facilitation
Summation
Decision
Rationale
Opinion
Content
36
Content - Opportunity One
  • Have students establish to facts of case
  • Help students activate their prior knowledge
  • Tie discussion of facts back to course content

37
Opinion - Opportunity Two
  • Make sure a diversity of views and opinions are
    heard
  • Create opportunities for inclusivity
  • Quiet students
  • Students at risk
  • Manage exclusivity
  • Discussion dominators (typically the instructor)

38
Rationale - Opportunity Three
  • Investigate supporting rationales for team
    decisions
  • Applicability of facts and opinions
  • The limits to applicability
  • Prioritizing of factors affecting decision

39
Decisions - Opportunity Four
  • Make sure all decisions are heard
  • Investigate the level of consensus within teams
  • Encourage narratives on groups discussion and
    decision making process
  • Push students to consider the outcomes of their
    decisions

40
Summation Opportunity Five
  • Review and integrate discussion themes
  • If generalized model appears, ask for specific
    examples
  • If specific example(s) are discussed, ask
    students to create a generalized model
  • Reminding students of what they have learned
  • Set stage for next exercise or module

41
A patient with a Brain Stem Stroke has collapsed
a lung from intractable hiccups and feed-tube
aspirates. He was admitted to intensive care to
deal with the resulting pneumonia. A few weeks
later the PRN order for Baclofen has expired. The
patient has begun to hiccup again has demanded
Baclofen and is growing increasingly distressed
that nothing is being done. It appears to be a
doctor oversight that it was not renewed. It is
late Friday night of a long weekend and the
doctor on call is not returning the page.
  • As the Charge Nurse, you should
  • Do nothing, but continue to attempt to contact
    the doctor
  • Give the patient the pill and note it in the
    chart
  • Give the pill, chart it, and continue calling the
    doctor
  • Mark a pill as spoiled and leave it with the
    patient

42
CORDS Planning
  • Content
  • Definitions, Facts
  • Codes of Ethics
  • Hospital Policy
  • Charting Requirements
  • Opinions
  • Safe inclusive questions quickly lets get a show
    of hands or what was your first reaction to the
    question
  • Control of discussion dominators

43
CORDS Planning
  • Rationales
  • Does the Codes of Ethics apply?
  • 1 minute paper?
  • Hospital Policy
  • What does it state?
  • What are your responsibilities?
  • Interpersonal Issues
  • Describe the behaviours and are they appropriate?
  • Decisions
  • What was your decision?
  • Is there a difference between what is the right
    thing to do and the correct thing to do
  • Can circumstance change the applicability of
    rules?

44
CORDS Planning
  • Summation
  • Code of Ethics
  • Hospital Policy
  • Charting Requirements
  • Appropriateness of PRN type order
  • Doctor/Nurse relationship
  • Patient/Nurse relationship
  • Should the Nurse been pro-active in reviewing
    the Doctors work?
  • Doing the right thing or doing the correct
    thing or are they the same thing?

45
Assessment Options
  • Team Summary
  • 1 page reflective summary
  • Your team decision
  • Did your group reach consensus easily?
  • Two most compelling supporting factors
  • Most important confounding consideration
  • Was your decision changed by the discussion?
  • What was a factor that your group did not fully
    consider that was revealed in the discussion?

46
Reporting Strategies
  • Hand Paddles
  • Stacked Overheads
  • Pin in a map/Post-it-Notes
  • Classroom Response Systems
  • Excel Charts
  • Short Summaries post around room with post-it
    note commenting

Making student thinking visible is the goal
Link Reporting Strategies for Large Classes
47
Rubric for the Six Facets of Understanding
  • Criteria for each facet
  • Explanation ? accurate
  • Interpretation ? meaningful
  • Application ? effective
  • Perspective ? credible
  • Empathy ? sensitive
  • Self-knowledge ? self-awareness

Adapted from Wiggins and McTighe, 2000
48
Running Application Exercises
  • How does a teacher set up good application
    exercises that will help students learn how to
    think about and use the course material to make
    meaningful decisions?
  • A critical part of this process is enabling each
    team to get feedback on its own thinking from
    other teams in the class.

Larry Michaelsen Video Clip
49
Your TurnFacilitation Planning
  • Identify the issues and facts to be discussed
  • Identify the pre-requisite knowledge the students
    require to solve the problem
  • Create discussion notes (CORDS)
  • Plan to activate prior knowledge
  • Create a summation plan
  • Possible milestones or twists

10 minutes work with partner
15 minutes presentation and feedback
50
TBL Assessment Final Thoughts
  • Reflective team summary
  • Team consensus document
  • Plan summary and peer critique
  • Peer evaluation

Calculating Peer Evaluation Scores
51
TBL Exercises Final Thoughts
  • Use authentic problems
  • Create choices that require the measured
    application of course concepts
  • Activate prior knowledge
  • Plan an effective reporting strategy
  • Plan reporting
  • CORDS
  • Planning for possibility of class consensus,
    optional milestones, summation planning
  • Accept that some exercises will fail

52
TBL Final Thoughts
  • Importance of orienting students to TBL
  • Assigned readings and reading guides
  • Readiness Assurance Process
  • Creating the MCQ tests
  • Planning RAP logistics
  • In-Class Application Exercises
  • Creating application exercises
  • Planning reporting events
  • Other Advice
  • Start small RAPs, some lectures, some in-class
    team exercises
  • Old quiz question or text book question banks
  • Traditional homework assignments, midterms and
    exams

53
  • http//www.learning.apsc.ubc.ca/tbl
  • http//www.teambasedlearning.org

Team-Based Learning A Transformative Use of
Small Groups in College Teaching.
jim.sibley_at_ubc.ca sophie.spiridonoff_at_ubc.ca
54
Team-Based Learning A Transformative Use of
Small Groups in College Teaching. by Larry
Michaelsen, Arletta Bauman Knight and L. Dee Fink
Discussion as a Way of Teaching Tools and
Techniques for Democratic Classrooms by Stephen
D. Brookfield, Stephen Preskill
The Art of Focused Conversation 100 Ways to
Access Group Wisdom in the Workplace by R. Brian
Stanfield (Editor)
55
TBL Large Classes Final Thoughts
  • Logistics.You need a good web site, a good
    e-mail distribution list, clear instructions for
    all assignments, and most importantly, a clear
    chain of command for student questions/issues
  • Teaching Assistants.How many TAs will you have?
    This is a crucial issue, because I rely on the
    TAs to get to know the teams and manage many
    issues. (A typical semester for my methods course
    would be 42 teams of 6 each. I started with 3 TAs
    and subsequently petitioned and got 4.)
  • Maintaining order in class.TBL results in much
    higher attendance than with the lecture format in
    large lecture classes. And since teammates get to
    know each other, during non-team instructional
    segments students who feel bored or disengaged
    are tempted to talk rather than sleep or skip. My
    TAs roam the section of the room where their
    teams are located not only during team exercises,
    but when student attention is required as well.
  • Setting Grade Weights.Surprisingly, I was able
    to make this work with 40-42 teams! It helped
    that I had experience managing the "setting grade
    weights" exercise in smaller classes first. (In
    large classes, I explicitly introduce the concept
    of "creating alignment" - deliberate compromise
    for the sake of the class).
  • Getting Started Early.It's hard to get started
    early (week 2) with teams in non-required
    classes. Non-required classes tend to have more
    adds and especially drops right up until the last
    possible day. I usually form teams in week 2 but
    then have to deal with drop/adds for a while.
    Drops are worse than adds, but it pays to know
    the deadlines and plan for them.
  • "Getting to Know You."I have added an early team
    assignment to all my TBL courses - one of the few
    done outside of class. Teams begin the semester
    with a social event (dinner, bowling, coffee). I
    believe that getting related early in the
    semester greatly accelerates the transition from
    group to team. They can select a team name, the
    team stance on grade weights, and discuss the
    peer eval procs and crits. (The written team
    deliverable for this exercise is simply a one
    page paper listing 3 things the team learned
    about each teammate.) An additional advantage -
    students love this assignment.Other issues I
    have some thoughts about include logistics
    for - forming teams - administering RATs -
    in-class team assignments - etc.

From Andy Finn
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