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Use Active Learning Techniques
Introduction
Although we frequently hear the phrase “active learning” in educational
circles, perhaps the best way to think of active learning in the classroom is
to focus on learning processes rather than on learning products.
Active learning redefines classroom practice from a static view of learning in
which knowledge is poured into the passive, empty minds of student learners to
a more dynamic view where, through project-based, collaborative, and problem-based
activities, students play a more vital role in creating new knowledge to be applied
to other professional and academic contexts. Proponents of active learning include
the late Brazilian educator Paulo Freire, who discouraged a “banking education”
model in which teachers deposited knowledge into students' minds for students
to dispense at test time in the same way we deposit money into a checking account.
Technology can play an important role in ensuring that learning is the result
of dialogue and production of new knowledge in new media for audiences beyond
the classroom, making both course content and student work more relevant.
Relevance
Although active learning projects focus on student roles and responsibilities,
their impact on the role of the instructor is equally important. Instructors who
embrace active learning find themselves moving away from the traditional lecture
or test that evaluates static knowledge of facts and concepts and privileged one-way
conversation between teacher and student to instead develop more interactive relationships
with their students that foreground collaboration and real-world application.
Such activities ensure that learning is a “two-way street.” Innovative
examples integrating active learning across the curriculum are below.
- The Institute
for Law School Teaching, Gonzaga University, Washington contains an inventory
for determining how prepared students, faculty, and institutions are integrating
active learning.
- A collaborative project in active learning and web-technology involving Indiana
University, Purdue Univeristy at Indianapolis, The United States Air Force Academy and
Davidson College, Just In-Time Teaching or JiTT encourages both self-paced and
collaborative learning projects that allow teachers to construct lessons and activities
based on the results of these formative student assessments. For more details, the JiTT
has both a Just-In Time
Teaching web site and a book Just in Time Teaching: Blending Active Learning
with Web Technology , by Gregor M. Novak, Evelyn T. Patterson, Andrew D. Gavrin,
and Wolfgang Christian (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1999).
- The Learning Technology
Consortium is group of nine universities dedicated to sharing best practices and
resources for teaching and learning with technology. As part of this idea-sharing
practice, they published Teaching with Technology: Seventy-five Professors from
Eight Universities Tell Their Stories (Ed. David Brown, Anker Publishing, 2000).
- The League of Innovation
in the Community College emphasizes the relationship between teaching, learning,
and technology and the community college experience through its annual conference on Information
Technology , as well as resources that include their collection Taking
a Big Picture Look @ Technology, Learning, and the Community College (Mark
David Milliron and Cindy L. Miles, 2000), which includes survey research, case
studies, and adminstrator testimonials about the impact of technology on student
retention and success.
Active learning works because its goal is simple: To move
students from passive recipients to motivated participants through more contextualized,
hands-on teaching activities. These activities vary from cooperative learning, to
project-based learning, to case studies and service learning. For more information about
some of these approaches, please see the section on Developing Reciprocity and
Cooperation Among Students. Active learning works because it transcends curriculum;
strategies can work in chemistry, engineering, business, education, and the humanities,
just to name a few disciplines. Finally, active learning works because it allows for
students to assess their own role in their learning processes. Charles Bonwell is a
nationally recognized Active Learning Scholar and co-author with James Eisen of
Active Learning: Creating Excitement in the Classroom (ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher
Education, 1991) and co-editor (with Tracey Sutherland) of Using Active Learning in
College Classes: A Range of Options for Faculty (Jossey Bass, 1996). Bonwell's Active Learning
Site contains both bibliographies and active learning research summaries.
Principle in Practice
Asynchronous bulletin boards and real-time chats are
among the common ways to move a hybrid or fully online class from passive listeners
to active participants. Other options include web-based research projects that
call for critical evaluation of sources, real-world case studies from interactive
CD-ROMs or online textbooks, and the use of technology to help students produce
new knowledge in new forms, including web sites, video clips, PowerPoint presentations
and much more. Keep in mind, however, that technology is not enough; it requires
a shift in instructional design and delivery to turn your classroom into an active
learning community.
- The computer interface comes with built-in assumptions about what values and which
people are important. Special concern needs to be taken to make interfaces as widely
participatory as possible. One strategy is to require all students to take an online
learning styles inventory to determine the ways they typically learn better: Verbally,
visually, aurally, kinesthetically. Have them share the results with peers online, and
help them use the results to better assess what elements of your course, or of
e-learning in general, meet their learning needs. Use such information as a formative
course assessment, re-designing when possible. A popular learning styles inventory is Neil Fleming’s VARK.
- A common instructional mode is the PowerPoint lecture in which the teacher
highlights the main points of a textbook chapter or other course content for students to
review in class or for later online access. Share the responsibility of student learning
by having students prepare their own mini-lecture/presentations of course content
through PowerPoint, preferably as a group, and then sharing those resources online. Such
an activity moves students from passive to active learning, becoming co-facilitators in
the process. More detail about the role PowerPoint can play in active learning strategies is available
through a tutorial from University of Minnesota 's Center for Teaching and
Learning Services.
- Online communities do not exist by sheer virtue of the technology or by putting
a group of people together online. Rather, communities must be nurtured in a way
that involves the equal collaboration between teachers and students. The following
are strategies for fostering more active engagement in online discussion.
- Assign Roles and Responsibilities to Students: Rather than being the “sage on
the stage,” invest students with the authority and responsibility to moderate
discussions, respond to questions by peers. This makes knowledge-making in the virtual
classroom a collaborative, social act. In addition, this process helps to foster online
decision-making in problem-based learning or case study activities for those students
who are not as experiences working collaboratively online.
- Structure Activitities that Require Reporting Back to the Larger Group: Depending
on the assignment, e.g., case studies, peer review, reading responses, it is important
to have smaller groups report back to the instructor as well as the whole class about
their progress, questions, and results. This validates the collaborative work students
have done by making them accountable for the dissemination of new knowledge.
- Online discussions require careful planning to avoid the “ping-pong”
effect in which students respond only to instructor prompts. Structure dialogue
in ways that allow incremental and increasing critical patterns of student interaction
with each other and with the course content, including:
- Initial Instructor or Facilitator Prompt
- Initial Student Responses
- Response to Peers
- New Conversation Threads
- Reflection and Synthesis
- Chatrooms, Discussion Boards, MOOs (Multiple Object-Oriented Environments),
BLOGS, etc., have become core elements of many online courses. Many educators
consider such elements the answer to past criticism that online education lacked
student interaction. Yet it is important to determine what types of interaction
can take place in these synchronous and asynchronous environments and to establish
a variety of interactions, so that all students are able to speak, listen, and
be heard. Strategies: Structure a range of possible communication
interactions that enhance your curriculum and meet students’ scheduling
and learning needs as individuals and as a whole: Bulletin boards for more in-depth
discussions of readings; small group chats to brainstorm topic ideas or virtual
debates among smaller groups of students; virtual office hours in real-time. Archive
conversations to allow for further reflection and follow-up. Also allow for non-computer
interactions, including telephone time, fax, and in some cases, face-to-face meetings
among students and between instructor and students.
- Construct discipline and project-specific WebQuests. According to WebQuest
developer Bernie Dodge at San Diego State University, "A WebQuest is an inquiry-oriented
activity in which most or all of the information used by learners is drawn from
the Web. WebQuests are designed to use learners' time well, to focus on using
information rather than looking for it, and to support learners' thinking at the
levels of analysis, synthesis and evaluation." For more information and examples
of WebQuests, visit the WebQuest page at San
Diego State University.
Assessing the Benefits
Active learning encourages assessment throughout the course rather than at
the end and recognizes the importance of self-assessment. This can include bulletin
board postings at mid-term to assess students’ perceptions of performance,
and individual and group progress reports, to help instructors to know what role
they should play in helping students be more successful. Because so many students
are creating online projects for the first time, a “portfolio” assessment
approach also helps showcase students’ development, again focusing on processes
and not just on graded papers or tests. Additional assessment resources are below.
-
Flashlight: According to Flashlight founder Stephen Ehrmann, the activities
Flashlight tools and resources should assess were in fact similar to Chickering
and Gamson's original Seven Principles for Good Undergraduate Practice.
- Both the National Learning Infrastructure Initiative (NLII) and the American
Association of Higher Education have partnered to create a virtual community of practice
for those interested in the role of electronic portfolios in fostering learner centered
assessment. For more information, visit the
NILI/Educause description of the project .
For More Information
Looking Ahead
As colleges and universities determine the varied modes
of instructional delivery required to meet the needs of an increasingly diverse
student population, it is clear that the “lecture as usual” isn't
going to transition well into hybrid classrooms that combine face-to-face and
online learning and change the role of teacher from expert to facilitator. While
many educators have taken the plunge into technology-based teaching, the difficulty
is that the technology advances so quickly that today's teachers can hardly keep
themselves afloat. Some of these new technologies are listed below.
- Blogs: The most current issue of T.H.E. Journal features “Content
Delivery in the 'Blogosphere' ,” an article by Richard E. Ferdig and
Kaye D. Trammell at the University of Florida that outlines the role of weblogs
in promoting active learning.
- Both Blogs and Wikis (interactive websites that can be collectively updated)
are featured in a two-part series,
“We-Learning: Social Software
and E-Learning” by Eva Kaplan-Leiserson,
for Learning Circuits.
- PDAs: Online resources abound about the role of PDAs across the curriculum. The TLT
Group website features a report by Betty L. Black and Marianne Niedzlek-Feaver at North
Carolina State University on the benefits of PDAs in the zoology curriculum,
“Assessment of a Handheld Computing Initiative.”
The Ohio Learning Network would like to thank
Content Specialist Kristine L. Blair
for thoughtfully gathering and organizing
the content about this Principle.

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