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Ken Graetz

Internet 'flips' the idea of how to teach a class - 0 views

  • "It is no longer going to be true that ... an effective class consists of a person standing in front, rubbing a rock on a rock, while students transcribe that information into their notebooks," U President Eric Kaler said at a "Campus Conversation" last week. The university has the opportunity to "turn those classrooms inside out."
  • assistant professor Colleen Manchester is able to add practice problems during her class
  • "We have time to think critically about the concepts and then apply them to real-world scenarios,"
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  • Class consists of discussions, tours and project proposals. On Thursday, small groups presented designs of the area surrounding the future Vikings stadium to three city of Minneapolis employees.
  • "I saw this as an experiment," Fisher said. "But, frankly, having done it this way, I don't think I'm ever going back."
  • A survey of about 720 physics faculty members found that 88 percent of those who responded had heard of interactive teaching methods, such as those used in "flipped" classrooms, and 72 percent said they had tried at least one. Yet the study, released in August, found about a third of those who had tried stopped using it.
    • Ken Graetz
       
      This research focused on a very wide range of research-based instructional strategies and provided no support for any explanation for the discontinuation. The authors also suggested that "being female" contributed to the continuation of RBIS and argued that this is a good reason for universities to hire more female faculty. I would take these results with a grain of salt.
  • Now that most have tried interactive teaching strategies, the study says, "It may be more fruitful to focus on those who discontinue use than to focus even more effort on encouraging the remaining holdouts."
  • Cramer "flipped" his spring "Computational Chemistry" course but hasn't decided what he'll do next time. When lecturing, "even when I had my A-game going, I would look at the students sitting, listening and wonder, 'Am I really getting through?'" So he put his slides online and focused class on discussion. But student evaluations requested more lecturing.
  • They said it "felt like we were coming to a seminar about what we already knew, when we didn't really know it," he said. Cramer suspects it's partly the subject matter. But he also wonders whether some of "flipping's" success is due to students spending more time. "In effect, you double your class time," he said.
  • She believes it's more about the instructor than the structure. Carlson "is a good teacher. ... He puts it in a way that's not complicated," she said. "He knows how to talk to everybody."
Chad Kjorlien

Assessment Strategies for the Flipped Classroom - 0 views

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    While this is a workshop PR blurb it really gets to a point I am interested in when it comes to the new roll for faculty/teachers in class and the types of assessment they are doing. Ken, we might want to check this one out.
Ken Graetz

4 Reasons I Love My Uncomfortable Classroom - 0 views

  • My classroom is not a place of comfort for me ….it’s uncomfortable and that’s good.
  • It’s not comfortable for me – as each unit brings up new requirements but once done – they are there.
  • I no longer ‘stand and deliver’ content and what I used to do just doesn’t cut it any more. This means  more hours revising to make sure that activities fit into this new style.
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  •  I am risking by trying new things and revamping old items. Doing this in front of, and with,  my students in the classroom is not comfortable. But choosing to eschew ‘comfort’ in my classroom I am seeing growth and learning like I never have before. My students are more involved and responsible learners
Ken Graetz

Before We Flip Classrooms, Let's Rethink What We're Flipping To - 0 views

  • No doubt about it, online learning at every level for every purpose is the flavor of the moment, and everyone is scrambling to offer a feast
    • Ken Graetz
       
      This was true maybe two decades ago. I think we are past this now.
  • more than 100 years of theory about cognition and learning-by-doing -- are being forgotten
    • Ken Graetz
       
      Let's be fair. Is this all being incorporated into our onsite courses now?
  • sn't it time to make use of new technology to move beyond streaming impersonal frontal teaching, instructional video tutorials or filmed lectures aimed at mass audiences
    • Ken Graetz
       
      I wonder whether the author has taken an edX or Coursera course? They are definitely not simply video lectures.
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  • if investors and innovators want the new flipped classrooms to have a significant and scalable impact on students, we must use technology to integrate and promote Constructionist learning spaces across the country -- faster
Ken Graetz

Challenge and Change - 5 views

  • Very few institutions are truly distinctive, and far too many have taken on more roles than they can support. Christensen and Eyring conclude that higher education has created confused, multiple-purpose missions and unsustainable institutions and, as a result, is vulnerable to disruption.2
  • In 2009, former Ohio State University President E. Gordon Gee proclaimed: "The choice for higher education during this critical juncture is reinvention or extinction."17 In the coming years, I think we'll see Gee's admonition come to pass, as some institutions redesign themselves and others fail.
  • Currently, the dominant course model in the United States is the cottage-industry model. Each course is designed, delivered, and assessed by an individual faculty member. One simple example illustrates the issue. The course Introduction to Psychology ("Intro Psych") is taught in nearly every higher education institution in the United States. If each of these institutions offers four sections of Intro Psych in the fall semester, at the more than 4,000 institutions in the United States, every fall 16,000 separate courses of Intro Psych are being designed, delivered, and assessed—as if this course had never been taught before. Each instructor designs his or her own course from scratch, alone, every semester. By not interacting with other instructors, none of these faculty members learn anything about the most-effective course content or most-effective teaching practices outside their own course. In the data-rich and networked world of the 21st century, this ancient course model stands in stark contrast to the large-scale courses, the collaborative courses, and the programmed courses that have now begun to appear.
    • Ken Graetz
       
      I love this example. It sounds so compelling and there is more than a kernel of truth here, But I think it's a very simple-minded and dangerous argument. There is a reason why diversity and choice exist in a free society. There are hundreds of breakfast cereals for sale at HyVee. Why don't we just have a few good ones?
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  • This is not simply a difficult moment for higher education: it is the dawn of a very different era. The institutions that will succeed—indeed, thrive—in this era will be those that constantly innovate.
  • In "flipped courses," content is delivered as homework; class time is reserved for collaborating with others, increasing understanding, and addressing misperceptions. The flipped model transforms classrooms from a focus on the delivery of information to interaction and comprehension.
  • The flipped course raises a powerful question. With content everywhere, available on demand from almost any kind of device, why are colleges and universities still bringing students together in a traditional classroom?
  • rapidly growing field of educational videos
    • Ken Graetz
       
      It's odd that he focuses on educational videos. Videos are great, but there is so much more to putting your lectures online.
  • The time for experimentation, as well as for careful thinking about policy and practice, is now, before these new experiments in large and free classes overwhelm traditional institutions.
  • Changing a few courses will not change the university. We have to ask much more fundamental questions. What is a college or university? Is it a designer of learning environments? A facilitator of learning? An aggregator of learning credits? An assessor of learning outcomes? A certifier of degree completion? When many courses are free, and when the degree is being challenged by other forms of certification, what is the role of higher education institutions? What kind of business models work?
  • and where introductory courses are commodities offered free or close to free.
    • Ken Graetz
       
      Ugh, this makes it sound like introductory courses are "throw away" courses. Bad move I think.
  • Whatever shape institutions adopt in the future, two changes must be at the heart of any substantive transformation. First, we must do a better job of producing learning outcomes. We simply cannot have a system in which more than one-third of students who start college still don't have a degree after six years, or a system in which more than one-third of college graduates have not improved their critical thinking skills. We won't be able to solve the problems of our society or our planet with people who can't think more robustly than that.Second, the nature of faculty work must change. The model of the faculty member as the designer, deliverer, and assessor of an individual course is eroding. In this new era, some faculty may be specialists in online course delivery; others may be course designers. Some faculty may be MOOC stars; others may spend more time in entirely different faculty roles, supporting student engagement and learning in innovative ways. For some faculty, the change in roles will be a profound loss; for others, it will offer energizing opportunities.
  • Can we transform ourselves before we are disrupted? Higher education institutions have a confusion of purposes, distorted reward structures, limited success, high costs, massive inefficiencies, and profound resistance to change.
    • Ken Graetz
       
      Yea team! Now go out there and get em!
  • Surviving—indeed, thriving—in this new era is not an issue of technology, even though technology has been a powerful driver of change. Ultimately, the issue for traditional higher education is one of culture.
  • Examine every practice, every assumption. Be guided by data, not habit. Constantly collaborate. Innovate wherever possible. Develop a welcoming attitude to change. And never be satisfied with the status quo.
  • Yet there is a cautionary tale here: far too often in this transformational work, only one course is transformed while the rest of the courses at an institution remain largely the same. The NCAT concepts could be applied broadly if institutions are willing to make deep and substantive change to a large number of courses across many disciplines.
Ken Graetz

How to Jump Start a Flagging Discussion Class - ProfHacker - Blogs - The Chronicle of H... - 0 views

  • if a wave of sleepiness is overtaking us due to the stifling heaters in our building
    • Ken Graetz
       
      Why is it too hot in your classroom? We need learning environments that help, not hinder, learning.
  • Sometimes I’ll just go sit in the back row of the room and tell my class they have to lead the discussion.
  • What are your favorite jump-start strategies for a flagging discussion class? let us know in the comments!
    • Ken Graetz
       
      I would guess that these are actually evidence-based and the the evidence is just not presented here. 
    • Ken Graetz
       
      Gamification of discussion?
Norb Thomes

Why Teachers Matter More in a Flipped Classroom - 0 views

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    Teaching is fundamentally about human interactions, and that can't be replaced by technology. I was once asked by a group of educational state representatives if the flipped classroom would allow them to hire less teachers.
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