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Faculty Perceptions about Barriers to Active Learning

Faculty Perceptions about Barriers to Active Learning. Joel Michael Analysis and Critique. Traditional Teacher’s Role. Teacher in front of class Writes on blackboard Students write Emphasizes rote memorization Memorize facts Students do not talk . Active Learning. From Paper

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Faculty Perceptions about Barriers to Active Learning

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  1. Faculty Perceptions about Barriers to Active Learning Joel Michael Analysis and Critique

  2. Traditional Teacher’s Role • Teacher in front of class • Writes on blackboard • Students write • Emphasizes rote memorization • Memorize facts • Students do not talk

  3. Active Learning • From Paper • “Active learning involves building, testing, and repairing one’s mental model of what is being learned” • What does this mean?

  4. Active Learning • Teacher interacts more with students • Get students involved in learning process • Ask questions • Class discussion on material • Emphasizes how to use knowledge • Use vivid examples • Students more likely to remember • Students tend to forget a lot of rote memorization!

  5. Active Learning • The author assumes this is a better teaching style • Is it better? • How would you measure this? • Tests may reflect the teacher’s style

  6. Active Learning • Education is moving in this direction in U.S. • May be good for many business and introductory courses • Courses with advance math • This teaching style may be harder to apply • I usually spent a week trying to understand advance mathematics

  7. Active Learning • Some courses require rote memorization • History • Times, Names, Events, etc. • Political Science • Structure of Gov., Leaders, etc. • Higher level history and political science courses could use more active learning • Students need a foundation of basic knowledge

  8. Active Learning • Word used often is facilitated • Teacher facilitates learning • Used in University of Phoenix

  9. Barriers to Active Learning • Author lists many barriers to this teaching style • Student Barriers • Faculty Barriers • Pedagogical Barriers • I critiqued some of them

  10. Barriers to Active LearningStudents • Students do not know how • Students do not know how to prepare for lectures • Students will not do it • Student heterogeneity • Heterogeneity means students have different ethnic and social backgrounds • How? • Possible richer discussions

  11. Barriers to Active LearningStudents • Reason for barrier • Students are used to traditional style of teaching since school • Rote memorization dominates education in U.S. • Grades 1 – 12

  12. Barriers to Active LearningFaculty • Requires more preparation time • Teacher has less control of classroom • Colleagues do not use this method

  13. Barriers to Active LearningFaculty • Poor student evaluations • From experience • Evaluations tend to correlate with the grades • Better grades leads to better evaluations

  14. Barriers to Active LearningFaculty • “Lack of teacher maturity” • Have no idea • Usually teacher is more mature than students • Faculty reward structure • Have no idea • Teachers usually have fixed salaries • Could be bonus for good test scores • Teachers do not know how to do it

  15. Barriers to Active LearningPedagogical Issues • Pedagogical – teaching • Classrooms do not lend to this style • Classrooms are inanimate • Takes too much time and content suffers • Student assessment is more difficult • Give same tests • Class size

  16. Barriers to Active LearningPedagogical Issues • Difficult to predict outcomes • Difficult to ensure “quality control” • Each class, students learn the same material

  17. Barriers to Active LearningPedagogical Issues • Not enough resources • Teachers always complain about this • Standard class times • A class is 50 minutes

  18. Criticism • Do you have any complaints about article? • Is it a good article?

  19. Criticism • Author never defines active learning! • He gave some vague definition • Psychologists are very good at doing this! • Along with economists, etc.

  20. Criticisms • Valid Criticisms • Students are used to traditional style • Faculty are used to traditional style • As a person gets older, the less likely they can change • Some faculty do not like questions • Students may ask a question that the professor does not know

  21. Criticisms • “Quality Control” • Dynamics of classroom could change with different students • I had classes that were fun and some classes I did not like • Valid criticism • Some criticisms are ludicrous!

  22. Criticisms • More preparation time • In the beginning, teachers may need more time to prepare • As they get used to it, it becomes easier • Learning Curve • Classroom size • Bigger the classroom, the more difficult • Also true for rote memorization

  23. Criticisms • If active learning works, then use it. • It also depends on instructor’s personality

  24. Barriers to Active LearningFaculty • Teachers may not implement active learning • U.S. Federal and states gov.s are passing laws • Many students are behind • Many U.S. schools are weak • Laws make the teacher responsible for students’ scores on national tests • National tests • Determine how well student’s scored compared to the national average

  25. Barriers to Active LearningFaculty • I do not like this • Forces teachers to emphasize test scores • Teacher has to focus on material for national exam • I do not think it is the teacher’s fault! • Thus, teachers are not likely to switch to active learning • Teachers are not likely to experiment with new method • School is more worried about test scores.

  26. References • Michael, Joel. 2007. “Faculty Perceptions about Barriers to Active Learning.” College Teaching 55(2): 42-7.

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