"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."
Internet 'flips' the idea of how to teach a class - 0 views
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assistant professor Colleen Manchester is able to add practice problems during her class
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"We have time to think critically about the concepts and then apply them to real-world scenarios,"
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Engaging Lecture Capture - 0 views
Best Practices in Lecture Capture - 0 views
Learning Catalytics - 0 views
MultiTaction Touch Screen - 0 views
Challenge and Change - 5 views
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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
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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.
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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.
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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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The Flipped Classroom Model: A Full Picture « User Generated Education - 0 views
TechSmith's Flipped Classroom Site - 1 views
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