how (you can help) people learn (using peer instruction)

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How people learn and how peer instruction with clickers supports it. Presented at CSULA STEM Summer Institute on Active Learning in the STEM classroom. Peter Newbury September 2013

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HOW PEOPLE LEARN

Peter Newbury, Ph.D.

Center for Teaching Development,

University of California, San Diego

pnewbury@ucsd.edu @polarisdotca

ctd.ucsd.edu

slides and resources: tinyurl.com/PI-CSULA

September 11, 2013

CSULA

Unless otherwise noted, content

is licensed under a Creative Commons

Attribution-NonCommericial 3.0 License.

Peter

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 2

PhD (Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada) 1998

in applied math

taught math and astronomy 1998 – 2007

Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative in Dept. of Physics and

Astronomy at UBC, 2008 – 2012

Center for Teaching Development, UCSD since August, 2012

Teaching and learning interests:

how people learn science, technology, engineering, arts, math (STEAM)

how to coax instructors to transform the way they teach and then

providing effective “coaching”

finding the most effective ways to implement peer instruction (clickers)

establishing and maintaining an online personal learning network

@polarisdotca peternewbury.org

3

how

people

learn

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) (Image: Sunset in Antartica by

Christopher.Michel on flickr CC)

Survey

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 4

Which of these do you associate

with a typical university lecture?

A) listening

B) absorbing

C) note-taking

D) learning

E) other

Survey

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 5

Which of these do you think students associate

with a typical university lecture?

A) listening

B) absorbing

C) note-taking

D) learning

E) other

The traditional lecture is based on the

transmissionist learning model

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 6 (Image by um.dentistry on flickr CC)

Let’s have a learning experience…

7 How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

Here is an important new number

system. Please learn it.

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 8

1 = 4 = 7 =

2 = 5 = 8 =

3 = 6 = 9 =

Test

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 9

What is this number?

Scientifically Outdated, a Known Failure

10 How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

We must abandon the tabula rasa

“blank slate” and “students as

empty vessels” models of teaching

and learning.

New Number System

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 11

Here’s the structure of the “tic-tac-toe” code:

1 2 3

4 5 6

7 8 9

Test

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 12

What is this number?

Constructivist Theory of Learning

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 13

New learning is built on and from existing knowledge.

You store things in long term memory through a set of connections that are made with previous existing memories.

(Images by Rebecca-Lee on flickr CC)

Creating memories (aka learning) involves having neurons fire and neurons link up in networks or patterns.

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 14

What are the patterns

of how people learn?

(And how do we use them?)

(Image: entropy memory creativity by jef_safi on flickr CC) How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

15

How People Learn

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 16

National Research Council (2000).

How People Learn: Brain, Mind,

Experience, and School: Expanded

Edition. J.D. Bransford, A.L Brown

& R.R. Cocking (Eds.), Washington,

DC: The National Academies

Press.

Available for free as PDF

www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=9853

Key Finding 1

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 17

Students come to the classroom with preconceptions about how the world works. If their initial understanding is not engaged, they may fail to grasp the new concepts and information that are taught, or they may learn them for the purposes of a test but revert to their preconceptions outside of the classroom.

(How People Learn, p 14.)

Key Finding 2

18

To develop competence in an area, students must:

a) have a deep foundation of factual knowledge,

b) understand facts and ideas in the context of a conceptual framework, and

c) organize knowledge in ways that facilitate retrieval and application.

(How People Learn, p 16.)

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

Key Finding 3

19

A “metacognitive” approach to instruction can help students learn to take control of their own learning by defining learning goals and monitoring their progress in achieving them.

(How People Learn, p 18.)

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

Aside: metacognition

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 20

Metacognition refers to one’s knowledge concerning one’s

own cognitive processes or anything related to them.

For example, I am engaging in metacognition if I notice that I am having more trouble learning A than B.

([2], [3])

Key Finding 3

21

A “metacognitive” approach to instruction can help students learn to take control of their own learning by defining learning goals and monitoring their progress in achieving them.

(How People Learn, p 18.)

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

Please break into groups of 3-4...

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 22

Each set of cards has

3 Key Findings

3 Implications for Teaching

3 Designing Classroom Environments

TASK: Sort your cards into 3 groups of 3 cards each by

matching the Implication for Teaching and Classroom

Environments to the Key Finding:

Implication

for Teaching

23

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

Key Finding 1

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 24

Students come to the classroom with preconceptions about how the world works. If their initial understanding is not engaged, they may fail to grasp the new concepts and information that are taught, or they may learn them for the purposes of a test but revert to their preconceptions outside of the classroom.

(How People Learn, p 14.)

Implications for Teaching 1

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 25

Teachers must draw out and work with the preexisting understandings that their students bring with them.

(How People Learn, p 19.)

New Coding System

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 26

Please memorize this code:

1 = 4 = 7 =

2 = 5 = 8 =

3 = 6 = 9 =

1 2 3

4 5 6

7 8 9

unsupported, unfamiliar content built on pre-existing

knowledge

(tic-tac-toe board)

Classroom Environments 1

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 27

Schools and classrooms must be learner centered. (How People Learn, p 23.)

Learning requires interaction [4]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 28

Learning requires interaction [4]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 29

% of class time

NOT lecturing

Learning gain:

pre-test 0

100%

post-test

0.50

Learning requires interaction [4]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 30

1 2

3 4

Key Finding 2

31

To develop competence in an area, students must:

a) have a deep foundation of factual knowledge,

b) understand facts and ideas in the context of a conceptual framework, and

c) organize knowledge in ways that facilitate retrieval and application.

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

(How People Learn, p 16.)

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

32

Implications for Teaching 2

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 33

Teachers must teach some subject matter in depth, providing many examples in which the same concept is at work and providing a firm foundation of factual knowledge.

Classroom Environments 2

To provide a knowledge-centered environment, attention must be given to what is taught (information, subject matter), why it is taught (understanding), and what competence or mastery looks like.

(How People Learn, p 20.)

(How People Learn, p 24.)

Development of Mastery [5]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 34

conscious

unconscious

incompetent competent

Level of Expertise

Beha

vior

Development of Mastery [5]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 35

incompetent competent

Level of Expertise

Development of Mastery [5]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 36

conscious

unconscious

adikko.deviantart.com

Beha

vior

Development of Mastery [5]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 37

conscious

unconscious

incompetent competent

Level of Expertise

Beha

vior

Development of Mastery [5]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 38

conscious

unconscious

incompetent competent

1

Level of Expertise

Beha

vior

Development of Mastery [5]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 39

conscious

unconscious

incompetent competent

1

2

Level of Expertise

Beha

vior

Development of Mastery [5]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 40

conscious

unconscious

incompetent competent

1

2 3

Level of Expertise

Beha

vior

Development of Mastery [5]

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 41

conscious

unconscious

incompetent competent

1

2 3

4

Level of Expertise

Beha

vior

Why Your Students Don’t Understand You

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 42

Expert brains differ from novice brains because novices:

lack rich, networked connections, cannot make

inferences, cannot reliably retrieve information

have preconceptions that distract or confuse

lack automization, resulting in cognitive overload

Key Finding 3

43

A “metacognitive” approach to instruction can help students learn to take control of their own learning by defining learning goals and monitoring their progress in achieving them.

(How People Learn, p 18.)

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

Implications for Teaching 3

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 44

The teaching of metacognitive skills should be integrated into the curriculum in a variety of subject areas.

Classroom Environments 3

Formative assessments — ongoing assessments designed to make students’ thinking visible to both teachers and students — are essential.

Instructors need to provide opportunities for

students to practice being metacognitive: an

internal dialogue about their own thinking

(How People Learn, p 21.)

(How People Learn, p 24.)

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 45

student-centered instruction traditional lecture

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 46

peer instruction with clickers

interactive demonstrations

surveys of opinions

reading quizzes

worksheets

discussions

videos

student-centered instruction

Clicker question

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 47

Melt chocolate over low heat. Remove the chocolate

from the heat. What will happen to the chocolate?

A) It will condense.

B) It will evaporate.

C) It will freeze.

(Question: Sujatha Raghu from Braincandy via LearningCatalytics)

(Image: CIM9926 by number657 on flickr CC)

Typical episode of peer instruction

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 48

Alternating with 10-15 minute mini-lectures,

1. Instructor poses a conceptually-challenging,

multiple-choice question.

2. Students think about question on their own.

3. Students vote for an answer using clickers,

smart phones, colored/ABCD voting cards,

Poll Everywhere,…

4. The instructor reacts, based on the

distribution of votes.

Typical “choreography”

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 49

1. Students think and answer on their own (“solo vote”)

2. Instructor says, “Interesting! Please turn to your neighbors

and convince them you’re right.” Walks around the

classroom, eavesdropping on conversations.

3. Students discuss question. As things quiet down, instructor

says, “I’ve heard some great discussions. Please vote

again.” (“group vote”)

4. Class-wide discussion, concluding with why the right

answer(s) is right and the wrong answers are wrong.

Depending on the solo vote distribution, agile instructors can

try other variations on 2 – 4.

In effective peer instruction

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 50

students teach each other while

they may still hold or remember

their novice preconceptions

students discuss the concepts in their

own (novice) language

the instructor finds out what the students know (and

don’t know) and reacts, building on their initial

understanding and preconceptions.

students learn

and practice

how to think,

communicate

like experts

Clicker Question

51

The molecules making up the dry mass of wood that

forms during the growth of a tree largely come from

A) sunlight.

B) the air.

C) the seed.

D) the soil.

Question credit: Bill Wood How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

52

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction)

Lunch Task #1: Find a partner

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 53

Find a partner or two in your discipline – this afternoon,

you’ll be writing a peer instruction question together. It’s

important to have

content knowledge (the concepts)

pedagogical content knowledge (how to teach and

learn the concepts)

Sit together when you get back from lunch.

Lunch Task #2: Watch this video

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 54

Veritasium (Derek Muller) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2KZb2_vcNTg

Student-centered instruction takes time

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 55

Five minutes of student-centered instruction every 15

minutes means 25% of class time is not lecturing. But you

(already) have lecture material to fill 100% of the time!

Where does that time come from?

Traditional classroom

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 56

1. Transfer: first exposure to material is in class,

content is transmitted from instructor to student

2. Assimilate: learning occurs later when student

struggles alone to complete homework, essay,

project

1. learn easy

stuff together 2. learn hard

stuff alone

(Mazur [6])

Flipped classroom

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 57

1. Transfer: student learns easy content at home:

definitions, basis skills, simple examples. Frees up

class time for...

2. Assimilate: students come to class prepared to

tackle challenging concepts in class, with immediate

feedback from peers, instructor

2. learn hard

stuff together 1. learn easy

stuff alone

(Mazur [6])

References

How (you can help) People Learn (using peer instruction) 58

1. National Research Council (2000). How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School: Expanded Edition. J.D. Bransford, A.L Brown & R.R. Cocking (Eds.),Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.

2. Flavell, J. H. (1976). Metacognitive aspects of problem solving. In L. B. Resnick (Ed.), The nature of intelligence (pp.231-236). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.

3. Brame, C. (2013). Thinking about metacognition. [blog] January, 2013, Available at: http://cft.vanderbilt.edu/2013/01/thinking-about-metacognition/ [Accessed: 14 Jan 2013].

4. Prather, E.E, Rudolph, A.L., Brissenden, G., & Schlingman, W.M. (2009). A national study assessing the teaching and learning of introductory astronomy. Part I. The effect of interactive instruction. Am. J. Phys. 77, 4, 320-330.

5. Sprague, J., & Stuart, D. (2000). The speaker’s handbook. Fort Worth, TX: Harcourt College Publishers.

6. Mazur, E. (2009). Farewell, Lecture? Science, 323, 5910, 50-51.

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