Higher education is slowly shifting away from the traditional lecture
style to incorporate more active learning into the classroom. While the
phrase “active learning” is commonly used among educators, the words
can sound foreign if you are unfamiliar with teaching. According to
Boots Quimby, Associate Director of Integrated Life Sciences at the
University of Maryland (UMD), the definition is simple.
“Active learning
is anytime a student is doing something besides listening to a
lecture,” she explained.
Courses
can incorporate different amounts of active learning into the
curriculum. For example, a class might be considered 10% active learning
when students pause to answer clicker questions throughout the lecture.
Similar to a remote control, clickers are an interactive tool students
use to answer multiple-choice questions. Professors receive immediate
feedback from the clickers as well as statistics about class performance
on their computer. This allows them to assess overall class
comprehension during a lecture.
Another example of active learning
is a flipped classroom. At the other end of the spectrum and considered
100% active learning, flipped classrooms provide students with the
content outside of class—typically video lectures or reading material. A
major goal of the flipped classroom is to help students master concepts
that are not easily answered by a Google search. Another goal is to
help students can develop higher-order thinking skills such as analyzing
and evaluating.
Helping students develop their own ideas
“I
was teaching human genetics to biology majors at UMD. The class was
working in small groups, discussing an article. I overheard my students
debating alternative interpretations of the data. I stopped for a moment
and realized: this is what college education should be—using content to
develop your own ideas,” said Quimby.
To foster this, Quimby—with
the help of five postdoctoral fellows— recently developed a flipped
cell biology curriculum course using the well-known textbook, Molecular
Biology of the Cell written by Bruce Alberts and colleagues. In the
classroom, instead of listening to a lecture or memorizing facts,
students work together in small groups analyzing real data—including
microscopy images and western blots. These exercises teach students to
draw their own conclusions—as well as acquainting them with the
scientific process.
UMD is one of many colleges and universities
that have begun to embrace active learning. Research shows active
learning increases student performance in science, technology,
engineering and math (STEM) fields (see papers here, here and here).
Now educators are putting these results into practice. For example,
William Jeffries, associate dean at the University of Vermont College of
Medicine, cited this study in the Burlington Free Press as a primary reason the medical school decided to replace all of its traditional lecture courses with active learning.
Resources
- For those in scientific teaching and active learning here are a few helpful resources:
- Teach Students How to Learn, by Saundra Yancy McGuire with Stephanie McGuire.
- biology offers multiple resources for educators including a Scientific Teaching Series focused on active learning as well as resources for two flipped courses: Cell Biology and Engineering Life. In each flipped course, iBiology videos featuring prominent scientists provide the content outside of the classroom, so that time in class can be spent engaging in conversations and discussing journal articles. iBiology also offers a variety of educator resources that support active learning.
- The Yale Center for Teaching and Learning offers a variety of resources and trainings for scientific teaching.
- Structure Matters: Twenty-One Teaching Strategies to Promote Student Engagement and Cultivate Classroom Equity.
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