cirtl spring 2016 the college classroom meeting 6 - peer instruction
TRANSCRIPT
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CIRTL – The College Classroom Meeting 6:
Cooperative Learning and Peer Instruction
March 3, 2016
Unless otherwise noted, content is licensed under
a Creative Commons Attribution- 3.0 License.
Peter Newbury
Center for Engaged Teaching, UC San Diego
Tom Holme
Department of Chemistry, Iowa State University
collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
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Scholarly approach to teaching:
(also known as Backward Design)
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
Carl Wieman
Science Education Initiative
cwsei.ubc.ca
What should
students
learn? learning
outcomes
assessment
active
learning
What should
students
learn?
What are
students
learning?
What instructional
strategies
help students
learn?
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Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
active learning
cooperative
learning
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Cooperative Learning[2]
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
Cooperative learning is the instructional use of small groups so
that students work together to maximize their own and each other’s
learning.
(Rique Campa)
constructivism social constructivism
recognizes that knowledge is
constructed in the mind of the
learner by the learner
([3], p.262)
implies that this “building”
process is aided through
cooperative social interactions
([3], p. 262)
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Key to successful cooperative learning
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
You need to teach the students
how to work effectively as a team.
You can’t leave it up to them to figure out
positive team member traits
team-building, management, conflict-resolution skills
how to remain inquiry-based: asking questions of each
other, making recommendations, receiving feedback
how to make effective, professional presentations
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What to watch for
and what to do about it
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
lack of group maturity
insufficient guidance and training from instructor about
how to work together
“free-riding”
instructor hasn’t built in enough individual accountability
loss of motivation
instructor needs to stay in touch with groups frequently
lack of skills and abilities
instructor needs to create groups with more diverse
skills and abilities
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Instructors must provide structure
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
Goal: all students practice thinking and communicating in
expert-like ways
Challenge: every student needs to learn both the content
and the expert-like behaviors
Solution: provide structure so every student practices
expert-like behaviors and learn the content
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What do you notice?
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
Eddy, S.L., and Hogan, K.A. (2014). Getting Under the Hood: How and for Whom Does
Increasing Course Structure Work? CBE Life Sci Educ vol. 13 no. 3 453-468
doi: 10.1187/cbe.14-03-0050
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Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
active learning
cooperative
learning
peer
instruction
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Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
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(Question: Sujatha Raghu from Braincandy via LearningCatalytics)
(Image: CIM9926 by number657 on flickr CC)
Discussion (peer instruction)
Melt chocolate over low heat. Remove the chocolate from
the heat. What will happen to the chocolate?
A) It will condense.
B) It will evaporate.
C) It will freeze.
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Typical Episode of Peer Instruction
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
1. Instructor poses a conceptually-challenging
multiple-choice question.
2. Students think about question on their own and vote
using clickers, colored ABCD cards, smartphones,…
3. The instructor asks students to turn to their neighbors
and “convince them you’re right.”
4. After that “peer instruction”, students may vote again.
5. The instructor leads a class-wide discussion concluding
with why the right answer(s) is right and the wrong
answers are wrong.
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Peer instruction is successful when
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
students teach each other while
they may still hold or remember
their novice preconceptions
students discuss the concepts in their
own (novice) language
each student finds out what they (don’t) know
the instructor finds out what the students (don’t) know
and reacts, building on their initial understanding and
preconceptions.
students practice
how to think,
communicate
like experts
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Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
1. identifying key concepts, learning outcomes, misconceptions
2. creating multiple-choice questions that require deeper thinking
3. facilitating episodes of peer instruction that spark and support expert-like thinking
4. leading a class-wide discussion to clarify concepts, resolve misconceptions
5. reflecting on the question: note curious things you overheard, how they voted, etc. so next year’s peer instruction will be better
before
class
during
class
after
class
Effective peer instruction requires
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t h e l e a r n i n g c y c l e
Peer instruction helps students learn
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
BEFORE DURING AFTER
setting up
instruction
developing
knowledge
assessing
learning
Adapted from Rosie Piller, Ian Beatty, Stephanie Chasteen
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t h e l e a r n i n g c y c l e
Peer instruction helps students learn
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
BEFORE DURING AFTER
setting up
instruction
developing
knowledge
assessing
learning
Adapted from Rosie Piller, Ian Beatty, Stephanie Chasteen
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t h e l e a r n i n g c y c l e
Peer instruction helps students learn
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
BEFORE DURING AFTER
setting up
instruction
developing
knowledge
assessing
learning
Adapted from Rosie Piller, Ian Beatty, Stephanie Chasteen
The students have not
resolved the concept.
But they know it exists
and why it’s interesting.
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t h e l e a r n i n g c y c l e
Peer instruction helps students learn
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
BEFORE DURING AFTER
setting up
instruction
developing
knowledge
assessing
learning
Adapted from Rosie Piller, Ian Beatty, Stephanie Chasteen
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t h e l e a r n i n g c y c l e
Peer instruction helps students learn
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
BEFORE DURING AFTER
setting up
instruction
developing
knowledge
assessing
learning
Adapted from Rosie Piller, Ian Beatty, Stephanie Chasteen
Students have had opportunities to
try, fail, receive feedback and
try again without facing a
summative evaluation.
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t h e l e a r n i n g c y c l e
Peer instruction helps students learn
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
BEFORE DURING AFTER
setting up
instruction
developing
knowledge
assessing
learning
Adapted from Rosie Piller, Ian Beatty, Stephanie Chasteen
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Writing Good
Peer Instruction Questions
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
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clarity Students waste no effort trying to figure out what’s
being asked.
context Is this topic currently being covered in class?
learning
outcome
Does the question make students do the right things
to demonstrate they grasp the concept?
distractors What do the “wrong” answers tell you about
students’ thinking?
difficulty Is the question too easy? too hard?
stimulates
thoughtful
discussion
Will the question engage the students and spark
thoughtful discussions? Are there openings for you
to continue the discussion?
What makes a good question?
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu (Adapted from Stephanie Chasteen, CU Boulder)
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Sample Questions
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
With others in your breakout room, open this link in your browsers and look through the collection of questions (start with the questions in subjects you’re familiar with.)
Some of these questions are deliberately bad!
clarity context learning outcome distractors
difficulty stimulates thoughtful discussion
http://tinyurl.com/zpbzrfr
Try to identify at least one characteristic that makes each
question good (or bad).
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clarity context learning outcome distractors
difficulty stimulates thoughtful discussion
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
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clarity context learning outcome distractors
difficulty stimulates thoughtful discussion
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
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clarity context learning outcome distractors
difficulty stimulates thoughtful discussion
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
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Which engineering application is most likely to use thermoplastic polymers?
A) Automobile engine
B) Asphalt road construction
C) Heating exhaust system
D) Consumer product packaging
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu (Tom Holme, Iowa State University)
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clarity context learning outcome distractors
difficulty stimulates thoughtful discussion
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
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Response to transport? If high level nuclear waste (HLW) was scheduled to be transported through your city, what action would you take?
A) Not much – safety concerns must have been addressed for transportation.
B) Not much – I’d be worried, but not enough to change my daily routine.
C) A little – I’d monitor what was happening by following reports on Twitter, etc.
D) Quite a bit – I’d be actively protesting or part of citizens groups that would track progress on Twitter, etc.
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu (Tom Holme, Iowa State University)
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clarity context learning outcome distractors
difficulty stimulates thoughtful discussion
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
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clarity context learning outcome distractors
difficulty stimulates thoughtful discussion
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
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In natural critical learning environments
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
“students encounter safe yet challenging conditions in
which they can try, fail, receive feedback, and try again
without facing a summative evaluation.”[1]
try
fail receive
feedback
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References
Peer Instruction - collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu
1. Eagan, M. K., Stolzenberg, E. B., Berdan Lozano, J., Aragon, M. C., Suchard,
M. R., & Hurtado, S. (2014). Undergraduate teaching faculty: The 2013–2014
HERI Faculty Survey. Los Angeles: Higher Education Research Institute,
UCLA. www.heri.ucla.edu
2. Derek Bruff, Henry (Rique) Campa, III, Trina McMahon, Bennett Goldberg
(2014). “An Introduction to Evidence-Based Undergraduate STEM Teaching”
(coursera MOOC) class.coursera.org/stemteaching-001
3. Eddy, S.L., and Hogan, K.A. (2014). Getting Under the Hood: How and for
Whom Does Increasing Course Structure Work? CBE Life Sci Educ vol. 13 no. 3
453-468
doi: 10.1187/cbe.14-03-0050