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Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor, Indiana University http://php.indiana.edu/~cjbonk, [email protected]

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Page 1: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking

Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor, Indiana University

http://php.indiana.edu/~cjbonk,

[email protected]

Page 2: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Expectations List

Page 3: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Why is Class Important

• For Students:– Variety, variety, variety

– Address preferences

– Provide challenges and supports

– Allows some autonomy

– Better prepared for changing times

• For Instructors:– Get to know students better

– More reflection on teaching

– More confidence

Page 4: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

My Intentions: Who Targeted

• Update teaching methods and philosophies

• Build collaborative teams

• Provide labels for what already do

• Create long-range goals

• Design usable curricula

• Foster interaction and collaboration

• Stop being giant yellow highlighters

Page 5: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Preliminary Action Plan…

Page 6: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Test Question #1

• When will active learning meet active teaching?

Page 7: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Charles I. Gragg (1940: Because Wisdom Can’t be Told)

“A student of business with tact

Absorbed many answers he lacked.

But acquiring a job,

He said with a sob,

How does one fit answer to fact?”

Page 8: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Traditional Teachers

• Supposed sage, manager, conveyer

• King of the mountain

• Sets the agenda

• Learner is a sponge

• Passive learning & discrete knowledge

• Objectively assess, competitive

• Text- or teacher-centered

• Transmission model

• Lack interconnections & inert

• Squash student ideas

Page 9: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Anyone? Anyone?

Page 10: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Must Statistics and Math teachers be boring?

Page 12: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

““It's an embarrassment that we It's an embarrassment that we can tell people almost anything can tell people almost anything about education except how about education except how well students are learning.”well students are learning.”

Patrick M. Callan, National Center for Public Patrick M. Callan, National Center for Public Policy and Higher EducationPolicy and Higher Education

Page 13: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

What Really Matters in College: Student Engagement

“The research is unequivocal: students who are actively involved in both academic and out-of-class activities gain more from the college experience than those who are not so involved.”

Ernest T. Pascarella & Patrick T. Terenzini, Ernest T. Pascarella & Patrick T. Terenzini, How College Affects StudentsHow College Affects Students

Page 14: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Evidence of Student Engagement

(Kuh, 2003)

• To what extent are students engaged in effective educational practices?

• How can we obtain and best use such information?

Page 15: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

National Survey of Student Engagement(pronounced “nessie”)

Community College Survey of Student Engagement(pronounced “sessie”)

College student surveys that assess the extent to which students engage in educational practices associated with high levels of learning and development (Kuh, 2003)

Page 16: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

NSSE BenchmarksNSSE Benchmarks

Level of Level of Academic Academic ChallengeChallenge

Active & Active & Collaborative Collaborative

LearningLearning

EnrichingEnrichingEducational Educational ExperiencesExperiences

SupportiveSupportiveCampusCampus

EnvironmentEnvironment

StudentStudentFaculty Faculty

InteractionInteraction

Benchmarks of Effective Educational Practice

(Kuh, in press)

Page 17: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Level of Academic Challenge

Challenging intellectual and creative work is central to student learning and collegiate quality. Colleges and universities promote high levels of student achievement by emphasizing the importance of academic effort and setting high expectations for student performance (Kuh, 2003).

Page 18: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Level of Academic Challenge(Kuh, 2003)

Sample of 10 questions:Number of assigned textbooks, books, or book-length packs of course readingsNumber of written papers or reports of 20 pages or moreCoursework emphasizes: Analyzing the basic elements of an idea, experience or theory Coursework emphasizes: Synthesizing and organizing ideas, information, or experiences Coursework emphasizes: Making judgments about the value of information, arguments, or methods

Page 19: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Active and Collaborative Learning(Kuh, 2003)

Students learn more when they are intensely involved in their education and are asked to think about and apply what they are learning in different settings. Collaborating with others in solving problems or mastering difficult material prepares students to deal with the messy, unscripted problems they will encounter daily during and after college.

Page 20: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Active and Collaborative Learning(Kuh, 2003)

7 questions:

Asked questions in class or contributed to class discussions Made a class presentationWorked with other students on projects during classWorked with classmates outside of class to prepare class assignmentsTutored or taught other studentsParticipated in a community-based project as part of a regular courseDiscussed ideas from your reading or classes with others outside of class (students, family members, co-workers, etc.)

Page 21: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Are senior transfer students generally more or less engaged compared with native students?

Less engaged (Kuh, 2003)

Page 22: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

What We’re Learning About Student Engagement From NSSE

George Kuh (in press). ChangeIndiana University Bloomington

Page 23: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

WhoWho’’s more engaged?s more engaged? WomenWomen

FullFull--time studentstime students

Students Students livingliving on campuson campus

Native students (those who start at and Native students (those who start at and graduate from the same school)graduate from the same school)

Learning community studentsLearning community students

International studentsInternational students

Students with diversity experiencesStudents with diversity experiences

What We’re Learning About Student Engagement From NSSE

George Kuh (in press). ChangeIndiana University Bloomington

Page 24: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Active & Collaborative Learning

• Samford University makes extensive use of problem-based learning (PBL) strategies to induce students to work together to examine complex problems.

Page 25: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Active & Collaborative Learning

• Eckerd College developed Autumn Term, a month during which classes meet from 9 AM to noon, five days a week. Group projects and discussion-oriented pedagogies are coupled with a community service project.

Page 26: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Student-Faculty Interaction

• Elon University added an extra hour of class meeting time for experiential learning. This allows students and faculty to dig deeper and promotes more frequent student-faculty contact.

Page 27: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

A Paradigm Shift Happening?

Page 28: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Students are too often…

• Not very interested in ideas

• Not respectful of others ideas

• Not well organized

• Wanting learning to seem easy

• Emotionally moody and sleepy

• Preoccupied with previous class or hour

• Expecting entertainment

• Unable to concentrate for too long

• Isolated or alienated

Page 29: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Learning Metaphors

• Teacher or text-centered to Student or thinking skill-centered to Student generated or problem-centered

• Transmission to Construction or Design to Discovery or Transformation

• Boring to Active to Love of Learning

• Sponge to Growing Tree to Pilgrim on a Journey

Page 30: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Smart Schools(Perkins, 1992)

• Causes of educational shortfall– Trivial pursuit model

– Ability counts most theory

– Missing, inert, naïve, ritual knowledge

– Poor thinking, rely on knowledge telling, cannot make inferences and solve problems

• Educational Goals– Retention, understanding, and active use of knowledge

Page 31: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Consultative Teachers

• Co-learner, mentor, tour guide, facilitator

• Student and problem-centered

• Learner is a growing tree and on a journey

• Knowledge is constructed and intertwined

• Many resources (including texts & teachers)

• Authentic, collaborative, real-world tasks

• Subjective, continual, less formal assess

• Display student ideas--proud and motivated

• Build CT, CR, CL skills

Page 32: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

And also a sense of humor!!!

Page 33: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Active Learning Principles:

1. Authentic/Raw Data

2. Student Autonomy/Inquiry

3. Relevant/Meaningful/Interests

4. Link to Prior Knowledge

5. Choice and Challenge

6. Teacher as Facilitator and Co-Learner

7. Social Interaction and Dialogue

8. Problem-Based & Student Gen Learning

9. Multiple Viewpoints/Perspectives

10. Collab, Negotiation, & Reflection

Page 34: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

7 Fundamental Principles of Learning(Kahn, 1993)

1. Learning is social

2. Knowledge is integrated into life of community

3. Learning is an act of membership

4. Knowing in engagement in practice

5. Engagement & empowerment are linked

6. Failure to learn results from exclusion from practice

7. We have a society of lifelong learners

Page 35: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Resources in a Learning Environment:

• Teachers

• Peers

• Curriculum/Textbooks

• Technology/Tools

• Experts/Community

• Assessment/Testing

• Self Reflection

• Parents

Page 36: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Sociocultural Ideas

• Shared Space and Intersubjectivity

• Social Dialogue on Authentic Problems

• Mentoring and Teleapprenticeships

• Scaffolding and Electronic Assistance

• Group Processing and Reflection

• Collaboration and Negotiation in ZPD

• Choice and Challenge

• Community of Learning with Experts and Peers

• Portfolio Assessment and Feedback

• Assisted Learning (e.g., task structuring)

Page 37: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Connections New Theories• Situated Learning--asserts that

learning is most effective in authentic, or real world, contexts with problems

that allow students to generate their own solution paths (Brown,

Collins, & Duguid, 1989). • Constructivism--concerned with

learner's actual act of creating meaning (Brooks, 1990). The constructivist argues that the child's mind actively constructs relationships and ideas; hence, meaning is derived from negotiating, generating, and linking concepts within a community of peers (Harel & Papert, 1991).

Page 38: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Teacher Self-Assessment for active learning. (Bonk, 1995)

In my classes...___ 1. students have a say in class activities and

tests.___ 2. I help students to explore, build, and connect

their ideas.___ 3. students share their ideas and views with each

other and me.___ 4. students can relate new terms and concepts to

events in their lives___ 5. students work in small groups or teams when

solving problems.___ 6. students use computers to help them organize

and try out their ideas.___ 7. I give hints and clues for solving problems but

do not give away the answers.

Page 39: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Teacher Self-Assessment for active learning. (Bonk, 1995)

In my classes...___ 8. I relate new information or problems to what

students have already learned.___ 9. students prepare answers with a partner or

team b/4 sharing ideas with the class.___ 10. I ask questions that have more than one

answer.___ 11. students take sides and debate issues and

viewpoints.___ 12. students develop ideas from a variety of library

and electronic resources.___ 13. students bring in information that extends

across subject areas or links topics.___ 14. students suggest possible problems and tasks.___ 15. I provide diagrams or pictures of main ideas to

make confusing info clearer.

Page 40: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

SCALCO (Bonk & Wisher, 2000)

The online forum offered multiple perspectives.

I received useful mentoring and feedback from others.

I liked collaborating with others online.

I had a voice within the discussion forum.

I could count on others to reply to my needs.

Page 41: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Four Key Hats of Instructors:

– Technical—do students have basics? Does their equipment work? Passwords work?

– Managerial—Do students understand the assignments and course structure?

– Pedagogical—How are students interacting, summarizing, debating, thinking?

– Social—What is the general tone? Is there a human side to this course? Joking allowed?

– Other: firefighter, convener, weaver, tutor, conductor, host, mediator, filter, editor, facilitator, negotiator, e-police, concierge, marketer, assistant, etc.

Page 42: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Online Learning Boring?

From Forrester, Michelle Delio (2000), Wired News. (Interviewed 40 training managers and knowledge officers)

Page 43: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

1. Motivational Techniques

Page 44: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Motivation Research Highlights (Brophy)

1. Supportive, appropriate challenge, meaningful, moderation/optimal.

2. Teach goal setting and self-reinforcement.3. Offer rewards for good/improved performance.4. Novelty, variety, choice, adaptable to interests.5. Gamelike, fun, fantasy, curiosity, suspense, active.6. Higher levels, divergence, dissonance, interact with

peers.7. Allow to create finished products.8. Provide immediate feedback, advance organizers.9. Show intensity, enthusiasm, interest, minimize anxiety.10. Make content personal, concrete, familiar.

Page 45: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Classroom Motivation Tips (Alexander, class notes, Pintrinch & Schunk, 1996;

Reeve, 1996; Stipek, 1998):

1. Include positive before negative comments.2. Wish students “good effort” not “good luck”.3. Give flexibility in assignments and due dates.4. Communicate respect via tasks select and

control.5. Design interactive and interesting activities.6. Use coop learning, debates, group

discussions.7. Minimize social comparisons and public

evaluations.8. Use relevant, authentic learning tasks.

Page 46: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

More Classroom Motivation Tips (Alexander, class notes, Pintrinch & Schunk, 1996; Reeve, 1996;

Stipek, 1998):

9. Use optimal difficulty and novelty.

10. Use challenge, curiosity, control, and fantasy.

11. Give challenging but achievable tasks.

12. Create short term/proximal goals & vary goals.

13. Give students diff ways to demo what they know.

14. Encourage students to give and get help.

15. Attrib failure to low effort or ineffective strategy.

(Attrib success to effort or competence)

16. Give poor performing student the role of expert.

Page 47: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

150 To Motivate Your Lover(Raffini, 1996)

1. Ice Breakers (a. treasured objects—do you have a treasured object, why is it impt? B. who is like me?)

2. Goal Cards, Goal Notebooks, Expectations (BS ST and LT objectives and ideas on how to achieve)

3. Floating A, Escape Clauses, Volunteer Assignments (to be used on any assignment within a day)

4. Self Report Cards, Self Evaluation (make set of tests available on the Web)

Page 48: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

150 To Motivate Your Lover(Raffini, 1996)

5. Discussion Questions, Issues, Problems (perhaps answer questions of another team; talking chips)

6. Team Competitions, Challenges, Puzzles

7. Success contracts and calendars (Guarantee an A or B if fulfill contract provisions)

8. Positive Statements, Self Reinforcements (Bury the “I can’ts”; save “I cans”; say “I think I can”)

Page 49: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

150 To Motivate Your Lover(Raffini, 1996)

9. Celebrations, Praises, Acknowledgements, Thank Yous, Put-Ups (multicultural days, trips, class awards, helpers, end of term events)

10.Class Community Building (designated class Web Site or Class Forum, Portal, Digitized Web class photo, photo album, class project, teeshirts, field trips)

Page 50: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

150 To Motivate Your Lover(Raffini, 1996)

11.Democratic Voting, Student Interest Surveys, Class Opinion Polls

12.Random Acts of Kindness, Service Learning/Teaching, Volunteerism

13.Change Roles or Status (Random roles, assume expert roles, switch roles for a day)

Page 51: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Activities—Motivational Ice Breakers

1. Expectations (flip chart)2. Self-Disclosures3. Talking String4. Visuals5. Index Card6. Treasure Hunt7. Accomplishment Hunt8. Psychic Massage9. Have You Ever Been?10.CR, CT, CL Web

Page 52: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

1. (Ice Breaker) Self-Disclosure Introductions...

• Round I: Self-disclosure introductions

–Who are you

–Job

–Interests

–Hobbies

Page 53: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

2. Self-Disclosure Introductions...

Round II. Self-disclosure introductions... a. Treasured Objects--Take out two

items out of your wallet and describe how they best represent you (e.g., family pictures, credit cards, rabbits' feet) and share.

b. Describe themselves (e.g., "I am a tightwad," "I am superstitious")

c. State name with an adjective starting with 1st letter of 1st name (e.g., Marvelous Mary.

Page 54: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

2. Self-Disclosure Introductions...

Round II. Self-disclosure introductions... d. Now intro self & also by a nickname

current, past, or potential nickname.e. Brainstorm a list of questions you

would like to ask the others...(e.g., My person I most admire is? The best book I ever read?)

F. Middle name game (state what middle name is and how you got it).

Page 55: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

3. Expectations Charts

• What do you expect from this workshop, what are your goals, what could you contribute?

a. Write short and long terms goals down on goal cards that can be referenced later on.

b. Write 4-5 expectations for this workshop/retreat

c. Expectations Flip Chart: share of 1-2 of these...

Page 56: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

4. Treasure Hunt (Index Cards)

a. Favorite Sports/hobbies/past times (upper left)

b. Birthplace and Favorite cities to visit (upper right)

c. Current Job and Classes Taught (lower left)d. 2 comments, things, or traits about yourself

(e.g., team player, personable, talkative,opinionated, hate Purdue, like movies, move a

lot, hate sports) (lower right)e. Teaching strategies you are proud of (in the

middle)

Page 57: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

4. Treasure Hunts

After completing card with interests, where born, would like to live, strengths, job role, hobbies, etc. and find a match (find one thing in common and one thing different with everyone)

Page 58: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

5. Accomplishment Hunt

a. Turn in 2-3 accomplishments (e.g., past summer, during college, during life);

b. Workshop leader lists 1-2 of those for each student on a sheet without names.

c. Participants have to ask "Is this you?" If yes, get a signature.

Page 59: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

6. Issues and Discussion Questions

a. Make a list of issues people would like to discuss.

b. Perhaps everyone brings 2-3 questions or issues to the meeting.

c. Partner off and create a list and then collect question cards, and,

d. Then distribute and your group must answer questions of the other groups.

Page 60: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

7. Team Brainteasers

• IQ tests

• Scrambled cities

• Crossword puzzles

• Competitions

• Dilemmas or Situations

• Unscrambled sayings.

Page 61: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

8. Coat of Arms--fill in.

#1: a recent Peak Performance;#2: something very few people

know;#3: draw a symbol of how you

spend your free time;#4: fill in something you are really

good at;#5: write in something that

epitomizes your personal motto.

Page 62: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

9. It’ll Never Fly Wilbur

a. Introduce a new idea or concept or plan.

b. Everyone writes 4-5 problems they see in it.

c. Divide into groups of 3-4 and discuss concerns.

d. Each group writes down 3 roadblocks on a 3 X 5 card.

e. Facilitator redistributes so each group gets a different card.

f. Subgroups think creatively of how to solve those problems and share with group.

Page 63: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

10. Demographic Groupings

Birthday Grouping—Nonverbally line up by date of the year born and partner off with person closest to you and then do…

Auto Grouping—Group by location one’s vehicle was manufactured (US, Asia, Europe) and then divide into truck and car people, color of vehicle, etc.

High School Sweethearts—Group by location where they graduated from high school (Midwest, South, East, West, Asia, Europe, etc.)

Page 64: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

11. Talking String

• state what hope to gain from retreat (or discuss some other issue) as wrap string around finger; next ones state names of previous people and then state their reasons.

Page 65: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

12. Disclosure Interviews

• Divide into small groups of about six people and then hand out prepared list of 5 questions in increasing order of disclosure for participants to ask each other and then have someone stand and their group must describe him or her.

Page 66: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

13. Psychic Massage (a closer activity)

a. Divide in teams of 3-5.b. In alphabetical order of first

names have someone turn his or back to the group

c. Team members must make positive, uplifting statements about that person behind his or her back but loud enough for others to hear them.

d. One minute per person.

Page 67: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

14. Positive Strokes

a. 2-3 times during the session, each person fills out a 3 x 5 card about other participants.

b. They must complete sentences like: “the thing I like best about (name) is” and “the biggest improvement I saw in (name) is.”

c. At the end of the day, the folded cards are passed out and read aloud and then given to the named person.

Page 68: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

15. Community Building

• Create common t-shirts, take photo of group, have online interest groups, etc., and perhaps put up on the Web.

• Put announcement of retreat on Web or newsletter.

Page 69: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

16. Communication/Learning Visuals

• Draw one or more of the following:– Gun, – cannon, – noose, – high fives, – thumbs up, – watch, – toilet, – smiley face, – etc.

Page 70: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

16. Personalizing (e.g., asking “how” and “what” questions)

• Ask how feel, what has happened, how might such and such help in the workforce, ask “what-if” things were different at work, and what’s next???

• How might they do things differently???

Page 71: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

18. Have you ever questions: • Performed the Heimlich maneuver• Tried on a straight jacket• Laid down inside a casket, • Drunk more than 25 imported beers during your life, • Ditched a blind date (or any date), • Been a Boy Scout or Girl Scout• Shaved your head, • Flown a plane, • Sky dived, bungee jumped, or whitewater rafted a dangerous

river, • Been in a play, • Milked a goat or a cow, • Done back-to-back all-nighters, • Completed a marathon, • Made an obscene gesture at someone when driving your car, • Cheated on your income tax, • Run a toll booth, • Been above the Arctic circle or below the Antarctic Circle.

Page 72: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,
Page 73: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

The 3 C’s:1. Critical

2. Creative3. Cooperative

Page 74: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Creative Critical

Cooperative

Page 75: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

What is an idea city? Where want to live? What makes it cool?

• Culture, parks, night spots, scenery, outdoor recreation, music scene, all-night cafes, extreme sports, outdoor recreation

• Lots of job opportunities

• Diversity within the community

Page 76: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

What is an idea city? Where want to live? What makes it cool?

• Convenience for amenities

• Fun; high energy—bike lanes, ultimate frisbee, climbing walls, urban parks, bistros and cafes not chains

Page 77: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

The Creative Class

• Values creativity, value tolerance, promote individuality, embrace diversity and differences, open to immigration, and merit

• Are active & participate, not watch sports

• Want: relax dress codes, use flexible schedules, and new work rules

Page 78: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

The Creative Class

• Engage in work to create meaningful new forms (scientists, engineers, professors, poets, novelists, actors, entertainers, architects, analysts, think-tank researchers, artists, editors, cultural figures)

Page 79: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Pedagogical Strategies:A. Creative Thinking

1. Brainstorm, Reverse BS: Top Ten Lists

2. Simulations, Creativity License Cards, Six Hats

3. Wet Inking, Freewriting, or Diaries

4. Role Plays & Assigning Thinking Roles

5. Forced Wrap Arounds

6. Semantic Webbing or Mapping

7. Idea-Spurring Questions, Think Sheets

8. Metaphors, What Ifs, Analogies

9. Checkerboarding, Attribute Listing

10. Exploration and Web Link Suggestions

Page 80: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

Activities—Creativity Tasks

1. Metaphorical Thinking2. New Perspectives3. Webbing4. Just Suppose5. Creativity Awareness6. Creative Dramatics7. Creative Writing and Story Telling8. Wet Ink or Freewriting9. Brainstorming10.Reverse Brainstorming

Page 81: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

1. Metaphorical thinking

• how is my school like:

–a prison, a beehive, an orchestra, ghetto,

–expedition, garden, family, herd, artist's palette,

–machine, military camp, Olympic games, hospital, theater, etc.

Page 82: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

1. Metaphorical thinking, Analogies, …

1. Creativity is like ____.

2. Being Creative is like ____.

3. Creativity is to ___ as...

Page 83: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

1. Synectics

Combining 2 dissimilar ideas. The joining together of unrelated elements (William J. J. Gordon). One brings strange concepts into familiar areas.

Putting yourself in a situation.

Thinking of how others might solve the problem.

Page 84: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

2. Breaking Mental Set and Shifting Perspectives

• The process of creation frequently involves a dramatic and usually instantaneous change in perception. Sometimes we all need a whack in the side of the head!

• Have students assume roles of other people, cultures, economies, genders, etc.

Page 85: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

2. Breaking Mental Set and Shifting Perspectives

•Word games; Which one is different; Nine dot problem; Flying Pig; Concealed colors.

•Analogies, Synectics, Breaking Set, Imagery, Aesthetics, etc.

Page 86: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

3. Webbing

Directions: write the topic in the center and link closely related ideas or questions in the first ring of ideas. As new ideas are suggested, they are connected by a line to the related item or items.

Page 87: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

3. Webbing

Webbing can be used to determine:

(1)all the possible directions and activities a student or class can explore as a result of interest in a specific topic or subject

(2)all that is presently known, and

(3)knowledge interrelationships.

This technique expands awareness for relating, integrating, and organizing brainstormed ideas.

Page 88: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

3. Webbing

a. Part I: What is creativity, critical thinking, cooperative learning?

b. Part II: What is active learning (i.e., students:)

(discover, drawn upon, break free from, use, take ownership, talk, write, relate)

Page 89: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

4. Just Suppose or What If

• Imagine a situation or scenario and reflect on the consequences.

• “Just suppose you have six weeks of paid professional development each summer for workshops or classes like this, what would teaching be like? What would learning be like?”

Page 90: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

5. Creativity Awareness: Creativity Scales

• Self-awareness of creative traits is important in promoting creativity.

• Rate yourself for creativity. What is creativity here? How did you do?

Page 91: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

5. Creativity Awareness: Creativity Models

von Oech's•Explorer•Artist•Judge•Warrior

Page 92: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

6. Creative Dramatics

• Biggest/smallest thing; Holding up the roof; Favorite animal; Mirror effect; Imagine taste/smell...

More Creative Dramatics (Davis book)

• Imagine taste/smell... Ice Cubes, Puppets, Mirror effect, Ridiculous Poses, Favorite animal, People Machines, Invisible Balls.

• Imagine hear, touch, smell, tastes, stiffest/most rubbery, Angriest/happiest.

Page 93: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

7. Creative Writing or Story Telling

Tell a Tall Tale:• One person starts a story and everyone adds something

to it. You might throw a ball to the person who is to add to it or the instructor might decide or the next person could just jump in. Could be done via e-mail.

Forced Wrap Arounds:• One person tells a story and it is repeated until it gets

through a group or classroom (teaches generative and constructive psychology principles)

Object Obituary:• Write a fictional obituary for some object that you own or

were close to.

Page 94: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

8. Wet Ink or Freewriting

Writing without reflecting or lifting your pen for a set period of time.

• Just imagine: imagine you have created a highly active teaching situation...What do you see? Can students wonder, question, speculate, take risks, active listening, respect for ideas, withhold judgment, seek justification??? How is creativity fostered here? Describe environment. Physically, mentally, emotionally, etc...

Page 95: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

9. Brainstorming

• Generating ideas to solve a particular problem, issue, situation, or concern. Here more is better and the wilder the better. The hitchhiking or piggybacking as well as combination of ideas is encouraged. However, there is no evaluation of ideas allowed.

• For example, How can we increase the use of active learning ideas in college settings?

Page 96: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

10. Reverse Brainstorming

• Generating ideas to solve the reverse of a particular problem, issue, situation, or concern. Once again, more is better and the wilder the better. The hitchhiking or piggybacking as well as combination of ideas is encouraged. However, there is no evaluation of ideas allowed.

• For example, How can we decrease the use of active learning ideas in college settings?

Page 97: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

11. Attribute Listing, Modification, and Transformation

a. Attribute Webbing/Listing: "XYZ" shapes, colors, sizes, purpose, numbering.

b. Attribute Modification: "XYZ"--after listing attributes, think of ways to improve each.

c. Alternative Uses: Uses for "XYZ" for this class or for teaching in general.

(find the second best or third best suggestion)

Page 98: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

11. Attribute Listing, Modification, and Transformation

d. Attribute Transferring: "XYZ"--transfer ideas from one context to the next.

(with idea spurring questions: What else is this like? What have others done? What else is this like? What could we copy? What has worked before?)

(What can we borrow from a carnival, funeral parlor, track meet, wild west)

Page 99: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

12. Idea Spurring Questions

•how can we:–MAXimize, –MAGnify, –arrangeRE, –combine-adapt, –subtutesti,–EEEXXXAAGGGERRRRATTEE

Page 100: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

13. Future Problem Solving

•Pose futuristic problem.•Have students solve in teams.•Present to class.

Page 101: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

14. Checkerboarding (done in Lone Ranger series)

• Analyze problems with 2 key variables or components.

• Write features of one item down the horizontal column (plots).

• Write features of another item down the vertical (characters).

• Randomly check off items and a new create story.

Page 102: Alternative Instructional Strategies: Part I General Intro on Active Learning and Motivation and Creative Thinking Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Associate Professor,

15. Morphological Synthesis

• Write features of one item down the horizontal column.

• Write features of another item down the vertical.

• Look at intersection for new item or concept.