Title: Towards Active Learning
1Making Learning Happen
Phil Race BSc PhD PGCE FCIPD ILTM Senior Academic
Staff Development Officer (part-time), University
of Leeds Tuesday, 19 May 2015
2Intended learning outcomes
- In this interactive plenary, and the group
exercises which follow, I hope you will become
able to - Take a fresh look at learning, based on your own
lifes experience - Leave behind some out-of-date (and downright
wrong) ideas about learning! - Identify five factors which underpin successful
learning - Address these factors towards the cause of
making learning happen in post-compulsory
education and beyond - Move that diamond down and right even better
success for LSBU.
3Origins of these ideas
- Asking questions to tens of thousands of people
about how they learn (and didnt learn)for the
last 20 years or so - All ages 16 to over-80s
- All levels - PVCs upwards
- Learners, teachers, trainers professionals,
doctors, lawyers, soldiers, clergypersons - All across UK and Ireland
- Singapore, Canada, Australia, New Zealand,
several parts of Europe. - The common factor human beings.
4Well worth a read
- Knight, P and Yorke, M (2003) Assessment,
learning and employability Maidenhead, UK
SRHE/Open University Press. - Bowl, M (2003) Non-traditional entrants to higher
education they talk about people like me Stoke
on Trent, UK, Trentham Books. - Peelo, M and Wareham, T (eds.) (2002) Failing
Students in higher education Buckingham, UK,
SRHE/Open University Press. - Northedge, A (2003) Enabling participation in
academic discourse Teaching in higher education
8, 2 169-80 (Carfax)
5Telling the story
- The open learning handbook Kogan Page, 1989 and
1995 - Who Learns Wins Penguin, 1995
- Various journal articles in the training field
1990 to 2004 - Chapter 1 of The Lecturers Toolkit 2001
- Effective Online Learning the Trainers
Toolkit (with David Anderson), Fenman, 2002. - Making learning happen in post-compulsory
education (Sage, 2005, in press, due out
November).
6Context
- Too many of the models we use to think about
learning have been designed in ivory towers, and
relate to people who aren't just ordinary
learners on education and training programmes. - The real problem, I believe, is that we tend to
end up using complex sophisticated language about
learning, and yet learning is something that
everyone does every day. In this mini workshop,
I'll get you thinking about how YOU learn best -
and how you don't learn well too. - This helps us to keep thinking about how our
learners are learning in our own workshops and
teaching sessions.
7Mind our language?
- Everyone learns. Not just students, not just
trainees, or trainers, or teachers, not just
professors, not just writers - And we talk of 50 participation in higher
education alone students are no longer just an
elite cross section of the population. - Yet the language we use to describe learning has
got silly in the last fifty years or so. - Its become remote, cold, psychological,
exclusive, elitist not a sensible way of
talking about something everyone does. - My mission is to get back to using language about
learning which everyone can relate to.
8Time to change - radically
- The Tomlinson Report has highlighted that
traditional unseen written exams are no longer
fit for purpose exams fail a generation of
pupils (Feb.2004). - The Burgess Committee Report (Measuring and
Recording Achievement, Nov. 2004, download from
SCOP or UUK) shows that the present UK Degree
classification system is no longer fit for
purpose e.g. 90 of Oxbridge graduates have 1st
or 2.1s and 50 nationally. - So were (at last) going to have to change
assessment, and link it productively to learning. - But were going to have to think again about how
learning happens best.
9And another problem
- Too much of the literature on learning has been
based on flimsy indeed slippery theories or
models, not underpinned by relevant research or
validated by widespread piloting, testing and
debate. - The Education curriculum has held on to some old
approaches till well after their use before
date. - The climate has changed irreversibly, theres
been global warming among learners, and the
time has come to take a fresh look at how
learning really happens and at what we can do
to cause it to happen.
10Three landmarks
- Task jot down who you think (guess) is the
source of the following quotation - Everything should be made as simple as possible,
- but not simpler.
- (Albert Einstein, 1879-1955).
- Also
- Knowledge is experience, everything else is just
information. - And
- Never stop asking questions.
11Training
- Other peoples knowledge is just information.
- Teaching is helping people to turn information
into knowledge - by getting them to do things with the
information - and giving them feedback about their attempts.
12Information and communication?
- Information can be communicated, in large
amounts, in books and articles, - or right to our computers, and downloaded onto
our hard discs. - But its not knowledge till we do things with it
- Apply it, extend it, interrogate it, analyse it,
disagree with it, compare and contrast it, and so
on.
13Learning a natural human process
You can download a version of the slides which
follow from my website www.Phil-Race.net
14Please take four post-its
15Four straightforward questions about how you
learn(ed)
- Each question is in two parts.
- Just think about part 1.
- Then jot down your headline response to part 2 in
no more than half-a-dozen words or so.
161 How do you learn well?
- Think (dont write anything yet) of something
that youre good at, something that you know you
do well. - How did you become good at it? Write a few words
on the yellow post-it.
17Most peoples views...
- Practice.
- Trial and error.
- Having a go.
- Repetition.
- Experimenting.
18A world famous view...
- One must learn by doing the thing though you
think you know it, you have no certainty until
you try.
19A world famous view...
- One must learn by doing the thing though you
think you know it, you have no certainty until
you try. - (Sophocles, 495-406 BC)
20Another...
- An expert is a man who has made all the
mistakes, - which can be made,
- in a very narrow field.
- (Niels Bohr, 1885-1962)
- Therefore we need to allow trainees to make
mistakes, and help them to gain feedback in a
constructive environment, to help them towards
becoming experts.
21But sometimes we really need trainers
- Someone who already knows
- Someone who already understands
- Someone who has already learned by getting it
wrong at first - And can help us to do the same
- Sometimes without saying a word
222 What makes you feel good?
- Think of something about yourself that you feel
good about. - How you can tell that you feel good about this?
Whats your evidence to support this feeling?
Write a few words on your green post-it.
23Most peoples views...
- Feedback.
- Other peoples reactions.
- Praise.
- Seeing the results.
243 What can go wrong?
- Think of something that youre not good at,
perhaps as a result of a bad learning experience. - What went wrong, and whose (if anyones) fault
may it have been? Write a few words on your blue
post-it.
25Most peoples views...
- Did not really want to learn it.
- Could not see the point.
- It did my head in.
- Bad teaching.
- Could not make sense of it.
264 What kept you going?
- Think of something that you did learn
successfully, but at the time you didnt want to
learn it. - What kept you going, so that you did indeed
succeed in learning it? Write a few words on your
pink post-it.
27Most peoples views...
- Strong support and encouragement.
- Did not want to be seen not able to do it.
- Needed to do it for what I wanted next.
28Five factors underpinning successful learning
- learning by doing
- learning from feedback
- wanting to learn
- needing to learn
- making sense - digesting
29Traditional views...
- active experimentation
- concrete experience
- reflective observation
- abstract conceptualisation
30Is it a cycle?
Active Experimentation
Concrete Experience
Abstract Conceptualisation
Reflective Observation
31Coffield et al on Kolb (2004)
- Finally, it may be asked if too much is being
expected of a relatively simple test which
consists of nine (1976) or 12 (1985 and 1999)
sets of four words to choose from. What is
indisputable is that such simplicity has
generated complexity, controversy and an enduring
and frustrating lack of clarity. - Learning styles and pedagogy in post-16
learning a systematic and critical review Frank
Coffield, David Moseley, Elaine Hall and Kathryn
Ecclestone, www.LSRC.ac.uk, 2004.
32Is it a cycle?
Wanting/Needing
Doing
Digesting
Feedback
33Ripples on a pond
Wanting/ Needing
34Ripples on a pond
Wanting/ Needing
Doing
35Ripples on a pond
Wanting/ Needing
Doing
Digesting
36Ripples on a pond
Wanting/ Needing
Doing
Digesting
Feedback
37But what if theres no want or not even a
need?
38But what if theres no want or not even a
need?
Doing
Digesting
Feedback
39Ripples on a pond.
Teaching?
Assessing?
Wanting/ Needing
Understanding?
Doing
Digesting
Feedback
40Designing teaching and training to maximise
learningbutterfly wing to tornado
- We can each address these five factors in our
teaching. - We can try to get our learners to want to learn.
- We can help them see the point, and take
ownership of the need to learn. - We can keep them busy, learning by doing,
practice, trial and error, repetition. - We can help them to make sense of what they are
learning - particularly by making sure that they get
feedback on what they are doing and thinking.
41Beyond learning styles
- Coffield et al (2004) were very critical of most
of whats been written about learning styles. - I have long been worried that most of the
instruments pigeon-hole learners, rather than
liberate them. - I hate the idea of a hidden agenda with scores
revealing something mystical about peoples
minds. - I believe in getting people to think about what
drives their learning.
42Worries about questionnaires
- I am concerned that some of the learning styles
stuff has never really been published, but
marketed by its owners. - I believe that yes/no or true/false are too
simplistic. - Thats why Im publishing later this year a
questionnaire with no hidden agendas, and with
four choices for each statement not two. - Its in your pack.
43Making learning happen in particular contexts
- Lectures with large groups (gt100)
- Whole-class sessions with smaller groups (lt30)
- Tutorials
- Practical work
- Online learning
- Self- and peer-assessment
- Through formative feedback
- Other?
44Finding out what makes learning happen
- Lets explore how we can use small-group teaching
to maximise the learning payoff for our students
in each of the learning contexts.
45What do students actually do in your chosen
learning context?
- Privately, please jot down a list of things which
your students do in your chosen learning context. - Make them all ing words or phrases.
- Then write each of the main ing words or
phrases on separate post-its. - Next, please stick your post-its onto a
flipchart, in order of learning payoff for
students, in diamond-9 formation (but you can
have more than 9).
46What students do, in order of learning payoff
Most productive in students learning
1
2
3
5
6
4
8
7
Less productive
9
47What students do to make learning happen, and
factors underpinning successful learning
Wanting Needing Doing Feedback Making sense
Enthusing learners, empowering them, giving them
things they enjoy doing.
Please annotate your post-its showing which
factors underpinning successful learning are
involved in each of the activities youve
chosen. Some activities will have more than one
of D ,F, W, N, M. Use a 3-point scale, e.g. WWW
for a great deal of wanting effect, WW and
W.
Giving learners ownership of the need, showing
them what they need to become able to achieve,
helping them to see the point of it all.
Getting them going and keeping them going, giving
learners practice, learning through mistakes,
repetition, avoiding logjams or blocks.
Making sure that learners get feedback on-line,
and from us, and from each other, and from all
the rest of their learning environment. Making
the feedback friendly.
Helping learners to get their heads round ideas
and concepts, digesting information to add to
their knowledge, increasing their understanding.
48Back to our intended outcomes
- How well do you now feel enabled to
- (2 hands very much better, one hand somewhat
better, no hands no better) - Take a fresh look at learning, based on your own
lifes experience - Leave behind some out-of-date (and downright
wrong) ideas about learning! - Identify five factors which underpin successful
learning - Address these factors towards the cause of
making learning happen in post-compulsory
education and beyond. - Move that diamond down and right even better
success for LSBU.