Title: Teaching Students High-Performance Learning
1Teaching Students High-Performance Learning
- Linda B. Nilson, Ph.D.
- Director Emerita
- Office of Teaching Effectiveness and Innovation
- Clemson University
- 864-261-9200 nilson_at_clemson.edu
lindabnilson
2Outcomes for You
- To teach your students research-backed,
high-performance strategies for strong
comprehension, deep learning, long-term
retention, easy retrieval, and overall improved
performance. - To ensure they actually implement some of these
strategies. - To help them along with other strategies.
3Areas
- 1. Be mentally fit.
- 2. Focus.
- 3. Time and space study sessions.
- 4. Problem solve effectively.
- 5. Take good class notes.
4- 6. Read for comprehension and recall.
- 7. Draw visual representations.
- 8. Prepare intelligently for tests.
- 9. Learn lessons from tests.
- 10. Study websites on studying.
51. Be mentally fit.
- No/low anxiety, fear, stress.
- To , breath deeply, slowly count to10,
visualize success also just before tests. - Do aerobic exercise or meditate before studying (
fear/anxiety). - Do light aerobic exercise while studying.
6- Get enough sleep.
- Learners need more sleep 9 hrs/ night.
- Sleep consolidates new material and experiences.
You effortlessly learn while you sleep!
72. Focus
- For you to do Foster attention and sustained
focus. - novelty, high contrast, interest, goal,
personal relevance, positive emotions about
material and learning it. Sell your material! - Know that learners differ in ability to focus
(block distractions).
8- Test Your Focus and How Fast You Juggle Tasks
- http//www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/06/07/tec
hnology/20100607-distraction-filtering-demo.html -
9Discourage multitasking
- No such thing mind rotates among tasks
rapidly, which performance - informational bottleneck inefficient
cognitive tasks take longer, have more errors. - Okay to do 2 things at once only if using
different parts of the brain.
9
10For doubting students Exercise from Dave
Crenshaw, The Myth of Multitasking
- Recite the letters A through J as quickly as you
can (__ secs.). - Recite the numbers 1 through 10 as quickly as you
can (__ secs.). - Interweave the 2 recitations as quickly as you
can (___ secs.) Typically 15-20 sec. with errors. - http//davecrenshaw.com/tag/multitasking-exercise/
10
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12Distractions
- Interfere with attention, rehearsal, encoding,
storage, retrieval every learning process. - cognitive load monopolizes mental resources
needed for learning encoding central
processing, visual, auditory, verbal - If constant, can cause craving for novelty
shorten attention span.
13 Main in-class distraction today
- 90-92 of students use cell phones in class for
non-class purposes (texting, Fb, tweeting, games,
surfing, etc.) (McCoy, 2013 Tindell Bohlander,
2012). - These distractions their learning, focus,
academic engagement, and grades (Clayson Haley,
2013 Duncan, Hoekstra, Wilcox, 2012 Foerde,
Knowlton, Poldrack, 2006 Junco, 2012a, 2012b,
2012c Junco Cotton, 2012 Kuznekoff
Titsworth, 2013 Lepp, Barkley, Karpinski,
2014 McCoy, 2013 Ophir, Nass, Wagner, 2009
Parry, 2013 Rosen, Carrier, Cheever, 2013
Tindell Bohlander, 2012).
14 Beware of mobile learning!
- If students do not resist their preferred cell
phone usage when they are not supposed to be
using their device, why would they resist it when
the device is sanctioned for class purposes and
in their hands? - Cell phones can interfere with doing HW.
15- Levy gave his students the technology to observe
their own computer use. Results - When students play back the Camtasia recording,
they see what was happening on their screens with
their own faces displayed in a corner. They watch
themselves flit among Words With Friends, e-mail,
Words With Friends, Spotify, Words With Friends,
and that goofy video of a cat rolling up against
a sake bottle. Some are disturbed to observe that
they got so distracted they forgot to work on the
main task they had set out to accomplish, like
reading an article.Parry, 2013
http//chronicle.com/article/Youre-Distracted-This
/138079/
16Students dont know
- Reading is all about sustained focus.
- Distractions like cell phones just make reading
take longer and reduce comprehension. - Must put cell phones far away!
- Trying to multitask can be dangerous.
17- Summary of research on effects of multitasking
inefficiency and stress - http//knowledge.emory.edu/article.cfm?articleid8
09 - Multitasking when flying costs lives.
- http//flightsafety.org/asw/aug09/asw_aug09_p18-23
.pdf - Not to mention texting and driving
18What about laptops in class?
- Same digital distractions as cell phones
- But failure rates and students
problem-solving skills, conceptual understanding,
good attitudes, and engagement .
19- Size matters! You can control usage.
- Course policies on use (e.g., specific times
only) - 3 students to one laptop
- Tight time frame, student accountability
- You circulate.
203. Time and space study sessions.
- Study 2 hrs. or so, then do physical or sensory
activity for 10-15 mins. - During study session, break every 20-30 mins. to
get up and stretch, walk around, etc. (30 secs.-2
mins.).
21- Review new material (readings, lecture notes)
within 24 hrs. to move it into long-term memory. - Review again several days later and again a
couple of weeks later. Then studying for test
will be easy, stress-free. - Leave time (e.g., good nights sleep) betw
studying and the test (Rohrer Pashler, 2010).
22You can help.
- Interleave practice Have students repeat
(review) tasks in an interleaved pattern
abcbcacab rather than a blocked pattern
aaabbbccc. - Have them solve old problems along with new
ones. - True for any skill, cognitive or physical.
234. Problem solve effectively.
- Follow the steps (require it!).
- You can help.
- Show partially worked problems.
- Have students start HW problems in class in
Think Aloud pairs. - Interleave old with new problems.
- Have them re-solve incorrect problems.
245. Take good class notes.
- Not all students take notes in class 78 of ?,
51 of ?. UCLA Higher Ed Research Institute,
2008 cited in Chronicle of Higher Education
(2009, September 4). - Students who look like they are taking notes may
or may not be. - Average notetakers record only 40 of important
ideas. Kiewra, K.A. (2005). Learn how to succeed
and SOAR to success. Upper Saddle River, NJ
Pearson Prentice Hall.
25- Most freq inaccuracies copying diagrams,
equations, numerical figures. - Most freqly missing your corrections, demos,
applications, examples, structure/sequence of
arguments. Johnston, A.H. Su, W.Y.
(1994). LecturesA learning experience? Education
in Chemistry (May), 70-76. - Why dont students take good notes, or take notes
at all?
26You can help Motivate students to take good
notes.
- Tell students benefits of taking notes
- 45age-pt diff on tests betw best worst
- Greater attention, focus
- Better selection of most important content
- Increased understanding, esp if students study
from reorg notes - Better short- (w/review) longer-term recall
Johnston Su (1994) Potts, B. (1993). Improving
the quality of student notes. ERIC Document
Reproduction Services ED366645 Bligh, D.A.
(2000). Whats the use of lecture? San Francisco
Jossey-Bass Cornelius, T.L. Owen-Schryver, J.
(2008). Differential effects of full and partial
note on learning outcomes and attendance.
Teaching of Psychology, 35(1), 6-12.
27- Tell students to take notes.
- Provide skeletal notes in Word, not PP.
Improve students recall of content better than
their own or instrs notes (key organization).
Cornelius Owen-Schryver, 2008. Hartley, J.
(1977). Lecture handouts and student
note-taking. Programmed Learning Educational
Technology 13, 58-64. Hartley, J. Davies, I.K.
(1978). Note-taking A critical review.
Programmed Learning Educational Technology 15,
207-224. Howe, M.J.A. (1977). Learning and
acquisition of knowledge by students Some
experimental investigations. In M.J.A. Howe
(ed.), Adult learning Psychological research and
applications. London Wiley. - Give open-note (but not open-book) tests.
28You can help Teach students how to take good
notes and best learn from them.
- ? dictation putting down the most important
content with least amount of ink, which requires
deep processing. - Model show YOUR notes once or twice.
- Ask Why do you think I wrote ____ down? If you
didnt, why not?
29- Conduct active listening checks on your
minilectures. - Incr from 45 to 75 of students IDing the most
important points in 3 sessions - Teach students note-taking systems.
- Modified outlining (indenting)
- Cornell system, with 5 Rs
- Concept or mind mapping (for later)
- Abbreviations
30- 2-min break to revise notes Carter, J.F. Van
Matre, N.H. (1975). Note taking versus note
having. J Educ Psych, 67(6), 900-904. Bentley,
D.A. Blount, H.P. (1980). Testing the spaced
lecture for the college classroom. Paper
presented at Georgia Psychology Assn meeting,
Macon. - 2-min pair review revision ODonnell, A.
Dansereau, D.F. (1993). Learning from lecture
Effects of cooperative review. J Experimental
Ed, 61(2), 116-125. Kelly, A.E ODonnell, A.
(1994). Hypertext and the study strategies of
preservice teachers Issues in instructional
hypertext design. J Educ Computing Research,
10(4), 373-387. - End class with a minute paper that makes students
review notes.
31- Write emotional reactions in margin (for recall).
- Take notes longhand, not on laptop.
- Write or draw summary right after class.
- Review notes before going to sleep (tells brain
not to delete). - Review summary next day.
326. Read for comprehension and recall.
33Do students do the readings?
- of college students who normally did the
readings, estimated from pop-quiz performances
(Burchfield Sappington, 2000) - 1981 80
- 1997 only 20
34- of college students who normally did the
readings, estimated from pop-quiz performances
(Burchfield Sappington, 2000) and self-reports
(Hoeft, 2012) - 1981 80
- 1997 only 20
- 2012 50-60
35Student contributions to the problem
- Student culture Better things to do
- No perceived need to read
- No perceived payoff to reading
- Poor reading habits, abilities, and persistence
36Faculty contributions to the
problem
- We forget our own college experiences.
- We assign too much/too difficult reading for our
students. - We dont seem serious about the readings.
37How serious can we be if we
- Dont try to sell the readings?
- Lecture the readings in class?
- Dont hold students accountable for the readings
when due (with sanctions and rewards)?
38- We act like we dont expect students to do the
readings. - ?? self-fulfilling
- prophecy
39Accountability tools
- Homework
- Daily quizzes
- In-class problem-solving or written exercises
- Cold-call recitation (
- discussion)
40To make these tools work
- Readings are only source of material because you
dont lecture them in class. - Daily accountability (when readings are due)
- Graded work, even if only worth 1/0 pts. for a
good faith effort
41Even if students do read, do they comprehend?
- 99 of freshmen show obedient purposelessness
(Harvard study). - 55 of those who read demonstrate basic
understanding (Hoeft, 2012). - Lack of focus and reading strategies
42Students dont know how to read academic
material. Teach them.
- Pre-read for reflection in-class or HW
- Preview readings - HW
- Review purpose for reading study questions or
problems - HW - Read with purpose for answers or solutions
written HW - Review readings - written HW
43- Give written HW to review and reflect on readings
(self-regulated learning). - most important concepts, principles, points, or
arguments and what you dont understand clearly - comparisons/connections to prior learning,
existing mental model, or other courses - affective reactions attitudes, values, beliefs,
emotions
44- Teach students self-testing with Read, Recall,
Review - 1. Read, then put away book notes.
- 2. Recall all you can, and recite it aloud or
write it down. - 3. Review for what you forgot or misunderstood.
-
45- Better immediate delayed free recall of
fact-based passages than rereading equal to
note-taking - Less time than note taking
- Gives learner deliberate practice and
retrieval practice - (McDaniel, Howard, Einstein, 2009 Roediger
Karpicke, 2006)
46Similar Schema
- SQ3R survey-question-read-recall-review
- PQR3 preview-question-read-recite-review
47- Tell students to note logical transitions and
signal words - Addition
- Cause-and-Effect
- Comparison
- Contrast
- Emphasis
- Illustration
- Review reading w/in 24 hrs. to move into
long-term memory. -
48Other Reading Methods for Strong Readers
- Marginalia record emotional reactions and/or
summarize paragraph usually with underlining.
Also effective as a supplement to
Read-Recall-Review. - Highlighting/Underlining
49Problems with Highlighting
- Too much text highlighted
- Doesnt improve recall
- When studying later, students
- recall highlighted text better but
non-highlighted text less well. - recall highlighted text as unrelated pieces of
info, losing overall meaning and
interrelationships. - Kiewra. K.A. (2005). Learn how to study and
SOAR to success. Upper Saddle River, NJ
Pearson Prentice Hall.
507. Draw visual representationsof readings
class notes and to review
- Require integration, organization, structuring of
knowledge how we remember long-term - When reviewing, lower cognitive load require
less working memory and fewer cognitive
transformations than text - Cue text and details
- better conceptual understanding, deeper
learning, longer-term retention, easier retrieval
51Topic
Topic
Main Idea
Sub Topic
Sub Topic
Topic
Sub Topic
Sub Topic
Concept Map - hierarchical
52Mind Map free association or hierarchical
53Flowchart sequence of events or operations
causal or procedural process
54Cycle
55Duration (Years or Months) Causes How Started Positive Effects for U.S. Negative Effects for U.S.
World War I
World War II
Korean War
Vietnam War
Desert Storm
Iraq
Matrix classify or compare-and-contrast types
of X
56Concept Circle or Venn Diagrams show
relationships among concepts, categories,
equations, topics, principles
578. Prepare intelligently for tests.
- List major content areas and designate their
relative importance. - Within content areas, what you should be able to
do or demonstrate? - No internal-states verbs like know,
understand - Use recognize, identify, reproduce,
apply, analyze, relate X and Y, create,
evaluate. - Prepare to do/demonstrate these actions.
58Know what these verbs mean to your instructor.
- Analyze
- Devise
- Enumerate
- Generate
- Justify
- Synthesize
- Validate
599. Learn lessons from tests. Post-Test
Self-Regulatory Activities
- Post-graded exam reflection
- Diff betw expected and actual performance
- Hours spent studying enough?
- How you spent exam-prep time
- Reasons why you lost points
- What you will do differently to prep for next
exam
60- Problems Re-solve incorrect problems (or similar
ones) and write out an error analysis or the
correct strategy. - Write study game plan based on test 1 results
assess and revise plan after each successive test
is returned. - Test Autopsy error analysis (form)
61Question Profile Question Profile Question Profile Reason Answer Was Incorrect Reason Answer Was Incorrect Reason Answer Was Incorrect Reason Answer Was Incorrect
Question Missed Points Lost Type of Question Carelessness Unfamiliar Material Misinterpreted Question Did not finish
62Study websites on studying.
- www.aw-bc.com/etips/usahome/index.html
- www.educationatlas.com/study-skills.html
- www.studygs.net/murder.htm
- www.how-to-study.com/pqr.htm
- www.mindtools.com/rdstratg.html
- www.ucc.vt.edu/stdysk/stdyhlp.html
- www.studygs.net
- www.samford.edu/how-to-study - videos