Contents contributed and discussions participated by Cub Kahn
Rubric for Discussion Participation - UBC - 2 views
Classes Should Do Hands-on Exercises before Reading and Video, Stanford Researchers Say - 4 views
"Introduction to Ancient Rome," the Flipped Version - 3 views
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Lessons from a Texas A&M professor who flipped a 400-student "Introduction to Ancient Rome" course.
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Warren, good question! The peer instruction approach of Eric Mazur et al. (see http://mazur.harvard.edu/research/detailspage.php?rowid=8) is a popular in-class technique. Here are some of other methods OSU hybrid faculty use to link online and face-to-face spheres: 1 - A low-stakes weekly quiz online prior to each class meeting. 2 - A discussion that flows from online to face-to-face and back again. 3 - A very short online essay turned in before each class meeting that builds on the online content, and is tied directly to in-class discussion or group work that follows. 4 - An interactive multimedia lesson online that provides a foundation for or extends in-class learning. (Examples: I recommend looking at Simon Driver and Megan McDonald's hybrid EXSS 444--I can connect you.) 5 - Group work online (e.g., formulating a debate position or a solution to real-world problem) that feeds into the next f2f class activity. 6 - A quiz at the start of each class meeting based on the online content. Whatever the method, a key is that the learning activities online channel rather directly into the in-class activities and vice versa. Think of it as a long ping-pong volley between learning activities in the online and f2f spheres from the first day of the term until the final exam or project.
A Review of Flipped Learning - 1 views
Eight Considerations for Online Text - 0 views
The Digital Sandbox - 0 views
SoundGecko - Listen to Any Article - 1 views
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