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From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin
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From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

From content delivery to facilitating learning:

the changing role of the educator

Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin

Page 2: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Why the change

• Better understanding of how students learn.• Changing conception of what counts as

knowledge and who can create it.• Greater focus on skill development.• More complex demands (the increasing IQ

conundrum). • Availability of learning resources for content

delivery.

Page 3: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Traditional model

• Content delivery by expert, students mainly passive

• Expectation that students read more or consolidate their knowledge in some way in own time

• Task to prompt and test learning – essay • Teaching to the test for exam preparation• Exam tests memory• Assessment allows surface learning to pass

Page 4: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Flipped classroom

Illustration from: http://campustechnology.com/articles/2013/01/23/6-expert-tips-for-flipping-the-classroom.aspx

Page 5: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Supporting the flipped classroom

Page 6: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Blooms taxonomy

Image from http://ileighanne.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/flipped-classroom-blooms.jpg

Page 7: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Easy transition – the interactive lecture

• Allow spaces for thinking, responding, framing questions, analysing, predicting, using what has been presented.

• More effective if collaborative as stuck students can catch up by learning from others and all stretch their understanding .

• We know that even a gap with nothing is more effective overall than a non-stop lecture

Page 8: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Johnson, A. H., and F. Percival. 1976. Attention breaks in lectures. Education in Chemistry 13:49–50.

Page 9: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.
Page 10: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Polls and Quizzes

Page 11: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Problem-Based Learning (PBL)

• Began in 1960s • Classic definition – “learning that results from

the process of working towards the understanding of a resolution of a problem”. (Barrows and Tamblyn 1980:1).

• Usually in student groups • Problem design is crucial to success

Page 12: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Three key aspects of the problem

• Problem triggers understanding of threshold concepts

• Problem provokes liminal space• Problem is a stimulus for hard fun

Page 13: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Threshold Concepts

• Irreversible – once grasped can’t go back• Integrative – enable integrated thinking, appreciate

complexity and relationships• Usually bounded - concepts that bind a subject together,

key ways of thinking in that discipline, define its edges.• Transformative – change how we think, involves letting

go of prior assumptions or unexamined aspects of one’s own understanding.

• Troublesome – inherently difficult, can involve specialist language (jargon), counterintuitive, and can be unstable

Page 14: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Examples

• From economics – opportunity cost• From politics – hegemony• From history – history is written by the victors• Generic – knowledge is unstable and can be

overturnedNot just key important ideas in discipline but concepts that change how we think in that discipline (and beyond).

Page 15: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

TCs as Jewels in the Curriculum

“Threshold concepts can be used to define potentially powerful transformative points in the student’s learning experience. In this sense they may be viewed as ‘jewels in the curriculum’ inasmuch as they serve to identify crucial points in the framework of engagement that teachers may wish to construct in order to provide opportunities for students to gain important conceptual understandings and hence gain a richer and more complex insights into aspects of the subject they are studying” (Rust 2005:57).

Page 16: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Liminal space as an uncomfortable portal in the learning journey

Safe in what I know

Scary liminal space where I

have to let go of what I know

New more sophisticated

understanding

Page 17: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Short exercise

• Think about your own discipline and identify 1-2 threshold concepts.

• Can be hard because you now think through them, so remember what was hard for you as a student, what changed your view, what do your students struggle to grasp or seem to grasp but struggle to apply.

Page 18: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Threshold Concepts

• Irreversible – once grasped can’t go back• Integrative – enable integrated thinking, appreciate

complexity and relationships• Usually bounded - concepts that bind a subject together,

key ways of thinking in that discipline, define its edges.• Transformative – change how we think, involves letting

go of prior assumptions or unexamined aspects of one’s own understanding.

• Troublesome – inherently difficult, can involve specialist language (jargon), counterintuitive, and can be unstable

Page 19: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Sharing resources

Page 20: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

PBL should be Hard Fun

• Expect laughter and joking• Encourage freedom and creativity• Allow playfulness ----------------------------------------------------------------• Expect intense activity• Use difficult/complex problems• Cope with resistance and tears

Page 21: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

What does PLB look like

• Tutor provides prompt – something complex that, when investigated fully, will need the threshold concept(s) and is ‘ill-formed’ (no right answer, or only one way to approach it)

• Students work in groups• Could last one session or whole module• Tutor meets groups to check on progress,

provide guidance.

Page 22: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Good quality problems are:• Engaging and motivating• Authentic, real-world, from professional/ social life• Ill-structured, open to multiple ideas/hypotheses, sustain

discussion• Multi-dimensional with physical, cognitive, social, emotional,

ethical dimensions• Stimulate a web of collaborative enquiry• Challenge students to achieve learning outcomes, understand

threshold concepts, work on problems• Graduate attributes-focused: enhance teamwork, info. Literacy,

critical thinking, creative problem solving. (Barrett and Moore 2011:18)

Page 23: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Think of an example you could possibly use in your teaching

Prompts can be things like:• a newspaper cutting• an experience related• a video• a photograph

Page 24: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Pinboards

Page 25: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Healey (2005a)

Emphasis on research processes and problems

Emphasis on research content

Students as participants

Students as audience

Is getting students involved in research another way of flipping the classroom?

Page 26: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

The research-teaching nexus

Research-tutored

Research-based

Research-led

Research-orientated

Emphasis on research processes and problems

Emphasis on research content

Students as participants

Students as audience

Page 27: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Adapted from Healey 2005a

Students assist tutor in

component of their research or

discuss results

Students undertake their

own inquiry-based learning

Curriculum teaches (cutting-

edge) subject content including

tutor’s own research

Curriculum emphasises teaching the processes of knowledge production

Emphasis on research processes and problems

Emphasis on research content

Students as participants

Students as audience

Page 28: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Example of ‘Hot’ Science

New problem from client

Tutor doesn’t know answer (authentic problem)

from John Cullum, Post Harvest Technology, Writtle College

Students engage in finding out: what it is, how it happened, likely impact, future projections, means of prevention. And can even be involved in advising the client.

Page 29: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Position of the mouldy satsumas on the Healey Axis?

Emphasis on research processes and problems

Emphasis on research content

Students as participants

Students as audience

Not here!

Page 30: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

Is the literature right?

Few academic staff would fully understand the

learning, employability, student satisfaction,

dispositional, and research gains from moving to here

Many academic staff, if asked to integrate

research and teaching, would gravitate to

interpreting the meaning here

Grant & Wakelin 2009

Visser-Wijnveen, et al 2012

Page 31: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

E-Portfolios

http://gettingsmart.com/2013/04/students-shine-through-digital-portfolios/

Page 32: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

http://ileighanne.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/flipped-classroom-blooms.jpg

Page 33: From content delivery to facilitating learning: the changing role of the educator Isis Brook and Florence Dujardin.

What could ‘150’ traditional learning hours look like?

• 13 x 3 hours of class time = 39 hours• 1-4 prep for class = 02 av• 5-32 on essay prep and writing = 20 av• exam = 03• Revision 3-32 = 12 av• Total = 100 hoursWith poor attendance, little prep, overnight essay writing, last minute cramming for exam, could be as low as 32 hours of surface learning and still pass.