active learing in action

Post on 18-May-2015

912 Views

Category:

Education

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Presentation given at Texas Library Association on April 16, 2010. Cynthia Henry and Kimberly Vardeman, Texas Tech University Libraries.

TRANSCRIPT

Active Learning in Action!Presented by

Cynthia Henry & Kimberly Vardeman

Texas Library Association Annual Conference

April 16, 2010

Active Learning

• Defined by Bonwell and Eison:

“. . . as instructional activities involving students in doing things and thinking about what they are doing” (Bonwell et al. 1991).

LIBR 1100

• Decided to move away from traditional lecture-style model classroom

• Team taught by two instructors

• Face to face with an online component

• One hour credit course

• Class of 30 freshmen

• Perfect size for active learning activities

Learning Activities Tested

• Class discussion

• Brainstorming

• Interactive website tutorial

• Group activities

• Think – Pair – Share

Think – Pair – Share

• King defined think – pair – share as:

“Students individually think for a moment about a question posed on the lecture, then pair up with a classmate beside them to share/discuss their thoughts” (King 1993).

Portrait – Active Learning Activity

• Each student created a self-portrait using graphics painting program (MS Paint)

• Posted digital image of their artistic endeavor to the online class discussion board

• Students given instructions and a step-by-step demonstration

Portrait – Active Learning Activity

Portrait – Active Learning Activity

Portrait – Active Learning Activity

Portrait – Results

• Very Successful

• Students used discussion board as a chat tool

• Class of 30 created 117 messages

• Students didn’t want to leave at the end of class

Thesis – Active Learning Activity

• Brainstorming activity in groups of four

• Topics• Keywords• Topic Questions• Create Thesis Statement

Thesis – Results

• This activity was problematic

• Students were lost

• Instructors walked around the room and helped groups organize

• Active learning still seemed treacherous

Table – Active Learning Activity

Information Piece Time Frame Who is interested in this information?

Who creates this information?

Press Release Example: Same Day General Public Reporters

Newspaper

Popular Magazine

Scholarly Journal

Books

Information Cycle

Table – Results

• Activity was successful

• Information cycle is a hard concept

• With the table activity, students internalized the information cycle lesson

• In post-assessment, all students correctly answered the information cycle question

Citation Tutorial – Active Learning Activity

Citation Tutorial – Active Learning Activity

Citation Tutorial - Results

• Students enjoyed activity

• Could distinguish between citations of books, journals, and newspapers

• Students referenced tutorial throughout semester

• In post-assessment, all students correctly identified the parts of a citation

Final Review Packet

Students worked in teams to complete

the following activities:

•Multiple-choice review questions

•Searched for articles on given topic

•Used citations to locate specific articles

•Citation “puzzles”

Final Review Packet - Results

• Successfully completed review activities

• Students taught one another and verified each other’s work

• Created great class discussions

Conclusion

• Active learning achieved the goals of engaging the students, increasing student-teacher interaction, and integrating different learning styles into lesson plans.

• Instructors learned to include written and verbal instructions with demonstrations or examples

• Scores increased 15% from the pre-assessment to the post-assessment

• 22 students improved their grade on the post-assessment

References

Bonwell, Charles C., James A. Eison, Washington D. C. Eric Clearinghouse on Higher Education, and Washington D. C. George Washington Univ. 1991. Active Learning: Creating Excitement in the Classroom. ERIC Digest.

Grubb, Jonathon, and Iellen R. Miller. 2009. Eastern Washington University Research Tutorial. Eastern Washington University2009]. Available from http://support.library.ewu.edu/reference/tutorial/flash/citation.html.

King, Alison. 1993. From Sage on the Stage to Guide on the Side. College Teaching 41 (1):30-35.

Contact

Cynthia Henry, cynthia.henry@ttu.edu

Kimberly Vardeman, kimberly.vardeman@ttu.edu

View the slides @ http://slideshare.net/kimberlyvardeman

top related