Title: Improving Teaching and Learning in Fifty Minutes
1Improving Teaching and Learning in Fifty Minutes
- Barbara Gross DavisUniversity of California,
Berkeley - June 9, 2009
2Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning
- Find out what students know
- Engage students
- Limit the amount of material
- Judiciously use PowerPoint
- Gather early feedback
3Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning
- Find out what students know
- Engage students
- Limit the amount of material
- Judiciously use PowerPoint
- Gather early feedback
4Find out what students know
- Assume students are not a blank slate
- Consider students previous knowledge
- Determine the accuracy of what students know
5Diagnostic Surveys/Pretests
- Existing
- Force Concept Inventory (Physics)
- California Chemistry Diagnostic Test
- Knowledge Surveys (Science Education Resource
Center, Carlton College) - Created
- typical exam questions define terms, solve
problems, short answer items - rating of familiarity key topics, concepts,
facts
6Sample Questions Rating of Familiarity
- A. Helicobacter pylori
- 1. Have never heard of this
- 2. Have heard of this but dont really know what
this is - 3. Have some idea of what this is, but not too
clear - 4. Have a clear idea of what this is and can
explain it
7Sample Questions Rating of Familiarity
- A. Helicobacter pylori
- 1. Have never heard of this
- 2. Have heard of this but dont really know what
this is - 3. Have some idea of what this is, but not too
clear - 4. Have a clear idea of what this is and can
explain it - Answer The bacteria that causes ulcers
8Sample Questions Rating of Familiarity
- B. Barry J. Marshall
- 1. Have never heard of him
- 2. Have heard of him but dont really know who he
is - 3. Have some idea of who he is, but not too clear
- 4. Have a clear idea of who he is and can explain
it
9Sample Questions Rating of Familiarity
- B. Barry J. Marshall
- 1. Have never heard of him
- 2. Have heard of him but dont really know who he
is - 3. Have some idea of who he is, but not too clear
- 4. Have a clear idea of who he is and can explain
it - Answer Australian researcher who discovered that
helicobacter pylori caused ulcers by ingesting
the bacteria and making himself very sick.
Co-winner of the Nobel Prize.
10Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning
- Find out what students know
- Engage students
- Limit the amount of material
- Judiciously use PowerPoint
- Gather early feedback
11Engage Students
- Shift from a teacher focus to a student focus
- Incorporate active learning strategies into your
class
12Shift in Focus from Instruction to Learning
- Instruction/Teacher Focus
- What do I want to teach?
- What will I do to teach?
- What is the best way I can present the material?
Learning/Learner Focus What do students need to
learn? What will students do to learn? What are
the best ways for students to construct new
understanding and develop new skills?
from Barr, R. and Tagg, J. (1995). From
Teaching to Learning A New Paradigm for
Undergraduate Education. Change, 27(6), 12- 25.
13Some Examples of Teaching Strategies that Engage
Students
- Discussion and interactive lecturing
- Group work
- Research
- Experiential approaches
- Role play and case studies
- Creative expression
- Simulations and virtual worlds
14Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning
- Find out what students know
- Engage students
- Limit the amount of material
- Judiciously use PowerPoint
- Gather early feedback
15Student is confronted with excessive material
16Student makes a valiant attempt to get through
the material
17Student becomes overwhelmed
18Time to drop the course
19Limiting the Amount of Material
- Reduce preparation time
- Limit a class session to three or four key points
- Address fewer topics in depth rather than many
topics superficially - Focus on the connection between the topic and
real-life problems and experiences - Tailor examples to students interests and
backgrounds - Bring in current scientific examples
20Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning
- Find out what students know
- Engage students
- Limit the amount of material
- Judiciously use PowerPoint
- Gather early feedback
21PowerPoint
- If you are going to use PowerPoint in your
teaching, avoid the most common annoying problem.
People tend to put every word they are going to
say on their power point slides. Although this
eliminates the need to memorize your talk,
ultimately this makes your slides crowded, wordy
and boring. You will lose your students
attention before you even reach the bottom of
your....
22- (continued) first slide.
- from Life after Death by PowerPoint, Don
McMillanhttp//www.youtube.com/watch?vcagxPlVqrt
M
23Problems with PowerPoint
- Hierarchical outline structure
- Click-click format
- Oversimplification of complicated ideas
- Lack of spontaneity
- Limited serious analysis
- Turns viewers into passive and uncritical thinkers
24(No Transcript)
25Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning
- Find out what students know
- Engage students
- Limit the amount of material
- Judiciously use PowerPoint
- Gather early feedback
26Your Class at Week One
27Your Class at Week Four
28Gathering Early Feedback
- Sample Questions
- Sample Methods
29Early Feedback Sample Questions
- General questions
- What is going well in the course?
- What needs to be improved or changed?
- What do you want more of? Less of?
- If you could change one thing about this course,
what would it be?
30Early Feedback Sample Questions
- Specific questions Open-ended
- What are the most important things you have
learned so far in this class? - What dont you think you understand well enough
yet? - What do you need to do in terms of understanding
the material between now and the end of the
semester?
31Early Feedback Sample Questions
- Specific questions Forced Choice
- How many of the reading assignments have you
completed so far? - All or almost all
- About 75
- About 50
- About 25
- None or almost none
32Early Feedback Sample Questions
- Specific questions Forced Choice
- How many hours per week, outside of regularly
scheduled class meeting, do you spend on this
class? - Less than 1 hour
- 1- 2 hours
- 3- 5 hours
- 6- 8 hours
- More than 8 hours
33Early Feedback Methods
- Index cards
- Brief questionnaire (print or online)
- Instant polling, clickers
- Student groups
34Responding to Early Feedback
- Positive Comments
- Suggestions for Improvement
- - What you can change immediately
- - What you change the next time
- - What you will not change
35Summary
- Maximize student learning
- Optimize the classroom experience
- Restrict the amount of material
- Use PowerPoint thoughtfully
- Seek feedback from students
36Books on Improving Teaching and Learning
- Boice, R. (2000) Advice for New Faculty Members.
Boston Allyn and Bacon. - Davis, B.G. (2009) Tools for Teaching. Second
Edition. San Francisco Jossey-Bass. - Lang, J. M. (2008) On Course. Cambridge, MA
Harvard University Press. - McKeachie, W.J. and Svinicki. M. (2006) Teaching
Tips. Twelfth Edition. Boston Houghton Mifflin.