Title: MINORITY ACCESS TO RESEARCH CAREERS WINTER INSTITUTE
1MINORITY ACCESS TO RESEARCH CAREERS WINTER
INSTITUTE
- ACTIVE LEARNING AND SCIENTIFIC TEACHING
- January 2005
Terry Derting, Ph.D. Murray State University, KY
Kathy Williams, Ph.D. San Diego State
University, CA
2OBJECTIVES
a. Provide an overview of alternative
approaches to education b. Shift thinking from
teaching to learning environments
  c.    Experience active inquiry and learning
cycles d. Present an example of a reformed
introductory biology course.
3You are important!
- Field of expertise
- Where you were born
- An adjective you would use to describe yourself
- An adjective your parents would use to describe
you
4Science is important
5TIMSS 2003 4th-grade Scores Flat, 8th Grade
Performance Up (January 2005)PISA 2003
Fifteen year olds in Hong Kong, Finland, and
Korea excel in applying the science and math
concepts theyve learned, whereas U.S. students
trail their peers in much of the industrial
world. Science, Dec. 10 2004
6News Public Science Literacy Must Be Increased
To Stem Tide of Anti-Science Sentiment The
Scientist
7State Govt Support for Higher Education
(Chronicle of Higher Ed.)
8Are our students learning what we think they are
learning?
9- HOW CAN WE IMPROVE THE SCIENTIFIC LITERACY OF OUR
POPULATION?
10Question 1
Please respond on a scale of 1-5 1strongly
agree 2agree 3neutral 4 disagree
5strongly disagree
- Students learn science best by doing science.
11Question 2
Please respond on a scale of 1-5 1strongly
agree 2agree 3neutral 4 disagree
5strongly disagree
- Science needs to be taught as it is practiced.
12Question 3
Please respond on a scale of 1-5 1strongly
agree 2agree 3neutral 4 disagree
5strongly disagree
- Large lectures (gt 50 students) can be active
learning environments.
13Question 4
Where on the continuum is the ideal classroom ?
Learner-Centered
Teacher- Centered
1 2 3
4 5
Increasing shared responsibility for learning
14Question 5
Where on the continuum is your classroom ?
Learner-Centered
Teacher- Centered
1 2 3
4 5
Increasing shared responsibility for learning
15Question 1
Please respond on a scale of 1-5 1strongly
agree 2agree 3neutral 4 disagree
5strongly disagree
- Students learn science best by doing science.
16Learning Pyramid
(National Training Laboratories, Bethel, ME)
Average Retention Rate
Lecture 5
Reading 10
Audio-Visual 20
Demonstration 30
Discussion 50
Practice by doing 75
Teach/Use 90
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19Boring!!!
20Lila M. Smith
21Pedago-pathologies
Shulman, Lee S. 1999. Taking learning
seriously. Change, 31 (4), 11-17.
22What do we do about these pathologies?
- Activity
- Reflection
- Collaboration
- Passion
- Combined with generative content and the creation
of powerful learning communities.
Shulman, Lee S. 1999. Taking learning
seriously. Change, 31 (4), 11-17.
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24Informal Cooperative Learning and the Lecture
Bookends - Learning Cycle Johnson et al. 1998.
Active Learning.
25Question 2
Please respond on a scale of 1-5 1strongly
agree 2agree 3neutral 4 disagree
5strongly disagree
- Science needs to be taught as it is practiced.
26Challenges to Change
- Diversity of the U. S. higher education
community. - Deeply entrenched aspects of university culture.
- Finally, perhaps the most significant challenge
is that many undergraduate faculty in the STEM
disciplines have received little or no formal
training in techniques or strategies for teaching
effectively, assessing student learning, or
evaluating the effectiveness of their own
teaching or that of their colleagues.
27- Im all for progress.
- Its change I cant stand.
- Mark Twain
28 Learners doing science...
29Question 3
Please respond on a scale of 1-5 1strongly
agree 2agree 3neutral 4 disagree
5strongly disagree
- Large lectures (gt 50 students) can be active
learning environments.
30Question 4
Where on the continuum is the ideal classroom ?
Learner-Centered
Teacher- Centered
1 2 3
4 5
Increasing shared responsibility for learning
31Question 5
Where on the continuum is your classroom ?
Learner-Centered
Teacher- Centered
1 2 3
4 5
Increasing shared responsibility for learning
32Change in Focus for All Teachers(K- Grad school)
- From teaching/instruction
- To learning (i.e., what is actually learned by
students)
33Change in Focus for All Teachers(K- Grad school)
- From teaching/instruction
- To learning (i.e., what is actually learned by
students) - From linear, single discipline approach dealing
with only theoretical problems - To application through an integrated approach in
dealing with real-life problems
34Change in Focus for Students
- Learners actively construct knowledge by
-
- engaging in meaningful, scientifically oriented
questions, - giving priority to evidence,
- formulating explanations from evidence,
- evaluating explanations, and
- communicating and justifying explanations.
-
(NRC, 2000)
35 It could well be that faculty members of the
twenty-first century college or university will
find it necessary to set aside their roles as
teachers and instead become designers of learning
experiences, processes, and environments.
James Duderstadt, 1999
36Engage, Explore, EvaluateWhats up with
Termites?
- On a sheet of paper, draw two circles near each
other on the center of the notecard with an ink
pen. - Release termites onto paper.
- Keep creatures safe. We will return them to
their original habitat. - What do you observe about termite behavior?
- Develop a question your group could explore if
you had more time. - (15 minutes select a time keeper)
37Questions for Reflection
- What did you learn?
- How did you learn?
- What was the role of the students? Teacher?
38Instructional Design Learning Cycle
- Engage
- Explore
- Explain/Elaborate
- Evaluate
39Learning Cycle
ENGAGE
- Initiates learning
- Makes connections between past and present
learning experiences - Organizes students thinking toward the learning
outcomes of current activities.
Modified from Uno, 1999
40Learning Cycle
EXPLORE
- Provides students with a common base of
experience to discover and develop - Current concepts
- Processes
- Skills
41Learning Cycle
EXPLAIN
- Focuses students attention on specific aspects
of their engagement and exploration experiences. - Provides opportunities for students to practice
- conceptual understanding
- process skills
- behaviors
42Learning Cycle
EXPLAIN
- Provides opportunities for teachers to introduce
- Concepts
- Processes
- Skills
43Learning Cycle
ELABORATE
44Learning Cycle
EVALUATE
- Encourages students to assess their understanding
and abilities. - Provides opportunities for teachers to evaluate
progress towards learning goals.
45I dont think there is any concept that you
cant make understandable to the educated lay
public. I always tell my students and postdocs
if you cant explain to your grandmother what you
are doing, probably you dont understand it
yourself properly. Nobelist Günter Blobel