1 / 36

Active Student Learning Increased Student Engagement in Developmental Math It IS Possible!

Active Student Learning Increased Student Engagement in Developmental Math It IS Possible!. : Susan Barbitta Donna Lemons Guilford Technical Community College. L eading E dge A cademic P erformance. M A T H. LEAP . Guilford Technical CC. North Central North Carolina

lara
Download Presentation

Active Student Learning Increased Student Engagement in Developmental Math It IS Possible!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Active Student LearningIncreased Student Engagement in Developmental MathIt IS Possible! :Susan Barbitta Donna Lemons Guilford Technical Community College

  2. Leading Edge AcademicPerformance • M • A • T • H

  3. LEAP

  4. Guilford Technical CC • North Central North Carolina • 4 Campuses • 20,000 Curriculum Students • 25,000 Con Ed Students • Developmental Math • 56 Faculty and Staff • ~7,500 Developmental Math Students/Year

  5. The Problem

  6. Did your classes look like this?

  7. Now they’ll look like this.

  8. NCAT Redesign Principles The National Center for Academic Transformation • Principle #1 • Redesign the entire course • Principle #2 • Encourage active learning • Principle #3 • Provide students with individualized assistance

  9. NCAT Redesign Principles The National Center for Academic Transformation • Principle #4 • Build in ongoing assessment and prompt (automated) feedback • Principle #5 • Ensure sufficient time on task and monitor student progress • Principle #6 • Modularize the student learning experience, especially in developmental math.

  10. 3 Courses 8 Modules • Essential Mathematics – Modules 1-3 • Introductory Algebra – Modules 1,4,5 • Intermediate Algebra – Modules 6,7,8 • Most non-STEM programs require mods 1 -5

  11. The new curriculum is: • Modular • Can be completed in one year or less • Flexible to allow students to complete at a pace appropriate to their individual needs • Rich in conceptual instruction

  12. TraditionalRedesigned • Three 4 credit courses Eight 1 credit modules • Pass or start over Pick up where you left off • Work through all the Credit given for concepts content previously mastered • Fixed paceFlexible Pace • One course/semester Ability to complete more than one course/semester

  13. LEAP LAB • 150 person Math Emporium* • 4 classes running concurrently • 25 walk-in • 40 person testing center • 30 person Math Emporium • 1 class of 24 and 6 walk-in • 80 person Math Emporium • 2 classes running concurrently • 15 person Math Emporium

  14. LEAP LAB • Mon.-Thurs. 7am – 9pm, Fri. 7am -3pm, and Sat. 9-1pm • Flipped Classroom • Students work on homework assignments, take tests and quizzes • All campuses have blocks on the computers so students can only work on Math

  15. Setting up a flexibly paced classroom (aka Emporium) • Fixed class time • 3-4 hours/week with an instructor of record • A minimum of 2 additional online hours required/wk • For each class of 35 students: • One instructor • One professional tutor/student tutor • Additional tutors first two weeks and the last week

  16. Course Organization • All units start with the pre-test • Linked to homework • 85% or higher-student proceeds to next unit pretest • Less than 85%-student works through the module

  17. Progression Through a Module • Take a pre-test • Credit given for objectives previously mastered • MML video (optional) • Workbook exercises • MML homework • MML quiz • MML Module test

  18. How to Prepare Faculty • Training in the online chosen software • Work through selected sections of the new course • Consistency amongst instructors • Academic Coaching • How to keep students on track

  19. How to Prepare Students • Explain how to progress through the course • Detail these procedures in your syllabi • Drive through the online software together • How/when to watch videos • How to review a quiz • How to access the e-book • Outline the cost & time savings • Less math is needed for most majors

  20. Keeping students on track • Knowing where your students are in the course • Soft due dates • Personal contact with every student weekly • Assignment completion times • Completion Schedule • Weekly emails

  21. Emporium Benefits • Cost savings: • College ~17% per student • Student - $300-$1500 • Mastery Based • No academic gaps • On-demand instruction • Acceleration and remediation within the same course • Students can complete more than one course per semester

  22. A, B, C Success Rates

  23. A, B, C Success Rates

  24. A, B, C Success Rates

  25. A, B, C Success Rates

  26. Subsequent Course Completion Rates

  27. Repeaters Completion Rates

  28. Subsequent Course Success Rates

  29. And the students say….

  30. “I like it because you get to skip sections that you already know how to do.” • “I hate to feel like I have to work at someone else’s pace. This course gives me the ability to learn the way I learn.” • “I like that you can go at your own pace. I just do not like how one teacher shows you one way to a problem and you get it and then another teacher comes behind that teacher with a different way and it confuses me.”** .

  31. “I feel like all of my class time is being used instead of getting lectured and being lost.” “I really like the individualized attention that the teachers give. They are always available toanswer your questions.” “I like that you can complete this course at your own speed and not the speed of the class. With this rate I am able to comprehend more.”

  32. And faculty say…. The good, the bad, and the ugly….. Change is hard!!

  33. Faculty comments: “At first, I didn’t know what to think, but I didn’t think I was going to like it.” “It can be challenging teaching 3 levels of Math all at the same time.”

  34. “It’s great seeing students really understanding the material.” “I like the ‘on-demand’ teaching that takes place. The student actually listens to me.” “Students learn by doing, not watching. Now they are more responsible for what they learn and how quickly they learn it.”

  35. Questions?

  36. Contact Information Susan Barbitta sbarbitta@gtcc.edu 336-334-4822 x50032 Donna Lemons dmlemons@gtcc.edu 336-334-4822 x500xx

More Related