spice up your lecture with inquiry-based learning

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Spice Up Your Lecture With Inquiry-based Learning Lynette Hoelter, PhD Dir., Instructional Resources February 23, 2011

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This presentation is a part of ICPSR's monthly Webinar series. It describes inquiry-based learning and how using data in the college classroom can help foster deeper learning. TeachingWithData.org, a repository of social science materials, was introduced.

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Page 1: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Spice Up Your Lecture With Inquiry-based Learning

Lynette Hoelter, PhDDir., Instructional Resources

February 23, 2011

Page 2: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Presentation Outline:

• Defining inquiry-based learning– Problem-based learning– Benefits to use

• Introducing TeachingWithData.org• Resources within TwD that fit the

student-driven approach to learning

• Other pedagogical approaches: Pedagogy in Action server

Page 3: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

What is Inquiry-based Learning?

• Part of the “Problem-based Learning” (PBL) set of pedagogies1

– Case-based learning – Project-based learning– Inquiry-based learning

• Notion that education begins and is fostered through student curiosity– First documented uses were in medical education in

the 1970s– Expanded into professional education and then

undergraduate curricula

1 Savery, John R. 2006. Overview of Problem-based Learning. The Interdisciplinary Journal of Problem-based Learning, v1(1):9-20.

Page 4: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Benefits of PBL• Assessment of traditional versus PBL strategies

show:– No significant differences in learning of “facts”– Lends itself better to multidisciplinary approaches

• Within social sciences, this might also mean integration of “technical” and “substantive” information.

– Learners much more engaged with material– More likely to see relevance to their lives and work– More easily able to recall and apply knowledge to

solving new problems (e.g., Doctors trained with PBL are better able to integrate information when making diagnoses)

Page 5: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Indicators of Effective Undergraduate Education

• Students should demonstrate high-level skills in – Communication– Computation– Technological literacy and information

gathering (to create new knowledge)–Making informed judgments– Accurately defining problems and

seeking solutions

Page 6: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Otherwise Known as…. Critical Thinking:

• Students as participants in a democratic society

• Skills include:– Questioning the source of evidence in a

stated point– Identifying gaps in information– Evaluating whether an argument is based on

data or opinion/inference/pure speculation– Using data to draw logical conclusions

Page 7: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

… or Quantitative Literacy:

• Necessary for informed citizenry• Skills learned & used within a context• Skills:

– Reading and interpreting tables or graphs and to calculating percentages and the like

– Working within a scientific model (variables, hypotheses, etc.)

– Understanding and critically evaluating numbers presented in everyday lives

– Evaluating arguments based on data– Knowing what kinds of data might be useful in answering

particular questions

• For a straightforward definition/skill list, see Samford University’s (not social science specific)

Page 8: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Students Realize Skills Are Marketable

• Often cited by students as something “tangible” that they have learned

• Definable skill set useful in many career paths

• Easy to tie to everyday life

AND…• Engages students more fully with course

content

Page 9: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Focus on Inquiry-based Learning

• Many of the advantages of Problem-based Learning (PBL), but more instructor guidance/ “control”– True PBL gives students a “messy,” real-world problem and they

must work together to find the information with which to come up with a solution – the entire course is typically structured around the problem and resulting group learning

– Each team member is responsible for part of the information gathering and true learning takes place when members share information and teach each other

• Instructor provides information with which students investigate the question, build knowledge, discover connections, and reflect upon a new understanding of the issue

• IBL allows instructor ability to use a smaller exercise or set of exercises within other pedagogical styles (e.g., lectures)

• Sometimes easier for introductory-level courses

Page 10: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Introducing TeachingWithData.org

• Project Partners– ICPSR and SSDAN, UM– Science Education Resource Center,

Carleton College– Professional Associations (Economics,

Geography, Political Science, and Sociology)

Page 11: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

TeachingWithData.org

• National Science Digital Library – only social science pathway

• Goal: Make it easier for faculty to use real data in classes– Undergraduate (esp. “non-methods”)– K(9)-12 efforts

• Includes survey of ~3600 social science faculty • Repository of data-related materials

– Exercises, including games and simulations– Static and dynamic maps, charts, tables– Data – Publications

• Tagged with metadata for easy searching

Page 12: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

TeachingWithData.org

Page 13: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

TeachingWithData.org

Page 14: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

What TwD Provides

Page 15: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Title Link Goes to Resource, “More About This” Displays Metadata

Page 16: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Types of Resources

• “Data in the News” feature – good way to bring in current events

• Lesson plans/lectures• Data-driven exercises• Data sources• Tools

Page 17: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Inquiry-based Learning (Reminder)

• Instructor provides framework• Students interact with original

sources and data• Develops analysis and

communication skills

Page 18: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Prepared Lessons (Example)

Page 19: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Data-Based Exercises: Online (Example)

Page 20: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Data-Based Exercises: No Stat Software Needed (Example)

Page 21: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Simulations (Example)

Page 22: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Sources of Quantitative Data

• Static tables, maps, graphs• Interactive maps• Raw data (with and without online

analysis tools)

Page 25: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Interactive Maps (Example)

Page 26: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Raw Data: Educational Extracts (Example)

Page 27: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Teaching Information Gathering

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Learning about Teaching

• TeachingWithData.org pedagogical resources

• Pedagogy In Action (SERC)– Related modules:• Teaching With Data• Teaching Quantitative Reasoning with the

News• Using Issues to Teach Science• Teaching Controversial Topics

Page 29: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

We’d Love to Hear from YOU!

• What have YOU tried? • What has worked best? • Favorites we should include in TwD?

Page 30: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Acknowledgements

• TwD Project Staff:– PI: George C. Alter, ICPSR– Co-PI: William H. Frey, SSDAN– J. P. DeWitt, Project Manager (SSDAN)– Lynette Hoelter, Project Manager (ICPSR)– Sue Hodge, ICPSR– Jane Wang, Programmer– Wendi Fornoff, Web designer

• Funded by National Science Foundation grant DUE-0840642

Page 31: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

Additional References

• Apedoe, Xornam S. 2007. Engaging Students in Inquiry: Tales from an Undergraduate Geology Laboratory-based Course. Science Education. DOI 10.1012/sce.20254

• Edelson, Daniel C., Douglas N. Gordin, and Roy D. Pea. 1999. Addressing the Challenges of Inquiry-Based Learning through Technology and Curriculum Design. Journal of the Learning Sciences.

• Major, Clair H. and Betsy Palmer. 2001. Assessing the Effectiveness of Problem-Based learning in Higher Education: Lessons from the Literature. Academic Exchange Quarterly, v5(1).

• Weimer, Maryellen. 2002. Learner-Centered Teaching: Five Key Changes to Practice. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Page 32: Spice up your lecture with Inquiry-based Learning

More Information?Lynette Hoelter

[email protected]

Webinar SlidesICPSR Front Page in announcement

section (beginning 2/24/11)