Active Learning strategies for online | Online Learning Insights - 0 views
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Jeff Andersen on 02 Feb 20In a recent article The 3 Instructional Shifts That Will Redefine the College Professor, the 'dynamic classroom' was listed as number one. The dynamic classroom is where faculty "do practically anything other than lecture" (Craig, 2015). A meager definition but the idea is right on-active learning, where students apply concepts through discussion, debate, writing, hands-on experiments, etc. produces better learning results. Numerous studies back up the claim; a recent paper shows student performance increased by just under half a standard deviation with active learning compared with lecturing (Freeman et al., 2014). In this post I share a four-step strategy that instructors can use to make learning active for online, blended or face-to-face learning spaces. Readers will find instructive examples and resources on active learning in the photo gallery (below) as well as in the list of resources at the end of this post.