{"id":7832,"date":"2022-08-17T09:28:20","date_gmt":"2022-08-17T13:28:20","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/faculty-excellence\/?page_id=7832"},"modified":"2022-10-27T12:08:36","modified_gmt":"2022-10-27T16:08:36","slug":"simple-strategies-to-use-in-class","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/faculty-excellence\/simple-strategies-to-use-in-class\/","title":{"rendered":"Simple Active Learning Strategies to Use in Class"},"content":{"rendered":"
Implementing active learning techniques into class can be easy.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n A note on your role. Assigning more writing does not mean instructors should be reading all this writing. This is writing for students to learn, not for evaluation. Make sure students are writing by walking around the room and observing, cajoling, scolding, and praising. But don\u2019t collect it.<\/p>\n Writing improves cognitive processing<\/strong><\/p>\n “Language provides us with a unique way of knowing and becomes a tool for discovering, for shaping meaning, and for reaching understanding\u201d. (James Britton)<\/p>\n A few research findings:<\/p>\n Think of a class as the time to apply, extend, and complicate what has been learned.<\/p>\n Louis Deslauriers, director of Science Teaching and Learning in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University, cautions that active learning is not simply engagement, but productive engagement toward a perceived worthwhile goal. Instructors can engage students even during lectures and direct instruction by pausing and giving students time to think about the following questions:<\/p>\n One of the best things students can do is reflect on their learning \u2013 to see for themselves what it is they know and do not know. Strong learners do this all the time, reflectively, but less experienced learners need guidance in developing their learning muscles. Here are some reflective assignments you can do in class or as homework.<\/p>\n Problem-solving Log.<\/strong> Students record their steps or thinking in solving a problem or completing an assessment. You can require regular logs (or drafts) with progress reports and steps taken to complete the task. Have students identify challenges, gaps, the knowledge they already had, or new knowledge learned.<\/p>\n Exam wrappers.<\/strong> Add a metacognitive question to your exam to promote metacognitive thinking about the process of exam preparation. Direct students to report and reflect on how they prepared for an assessment and what they imagine doing differently next time. After the exam, or when you meet again next, conduct a short discussion asking students to share their reflections with classmates to support improvement in exam preparation activities. (Ambrose et al., 2010). For an example you can import and adapt for your course, log into Canvas, click on “Commons” (far left navigation) and search “Quiz and Exam Wrapper Survey.”<\/p>\n Short quizzes that test for understanding.<\/strong> A five-minute quiz once a week, perhaps even a one-question quiz, shows students immediately what their level of understanding is. Typically with a low point value, short quizzes should be followed by a brief discussion of questions missed and an investigation of what led to these gaps.<\/p>\n Exit tickets.<\/strong> Exit tickets allow you to quickly gauge student understanding and demonstrate that you value student success. Use index cards, post-it notes, online quizzes, or polls that students complete near the end of class. Prompts include: what is the most important thing you learned today? What more do you need to learn (to meet the objective)? What are you still confused about?<\/p>\n Muddiest point.<\/strong> This technique consists of asking students to jot down a quick response to one question: \u201cWhat was the muddiest point in [the lecture, discussion, homework assignment, film, etc.]?\u201d The term \u201cmuddiest\u201d means \u201cmost unclear\u201d or \u201cmost confusing.\u201d (Angelo et al., 1993) and essentially helps students discover and zero in on the questions they need to address to conquer a lesson.<\/p>\n Minute papers.<\/strong> These provide an assessment of what students learned in a class and help students inscribe learning into long-term memory. Minute papers are easy to do: ask students to write for two minutes on the following questions: \u201cWhat was the most important thing you learned during this class?\u201d and \u201cWhat important question remains unanswered?\u201d Collect these papers as students leave for your learning, returning them to students the next class session. Notes or evaluations or not necessary, though it may be useful to make general comments about what you observed students\u2019 understanding.<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n Google Drive<\/a>: collaborative folders, files, docs, sheets, slides<\/p>\n Perusall<\/a>: social annotation platform<\/p>\n Padlet<\/a>: live discussion and brainstorming<\/p>\n Kahoot<\/a>: Create games and trivia for study sessions<\/p>\n Break-out rooms<\/strong><\/p>\n Share screen<\/strong><\/p>\n Polling<\/strong><\/p>\n Chat<\/strong><\/p>\n For more information or help, please\u00a0email<\/a>\u00a0the Office for Faculty Excellence or\u00a0make an appointment<\/a>\u00a0with a consultant.<\/p>\n Third-party content is not covered under the Creative Commons license and may be subject to additional intellectual property notices, information, or restrictions. You are solely responsible for obtaining permission to use third party content or determining whether your use is fair use and for responding to any claims that may arise.<\/p>\nBeginning Activities<\/h3>\n
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Concluding Activities<\/h3>\n
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What is the Value of Using Writing in Class?<\/h3>\n
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Zoom Tools<\/h3>\n
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What Not to Do<\/h3>\n
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\nTeaching Resources by\u00a0ÌÇÐÄvlog Office for Faculty Excellence<\/a>\u00a0is licensed under a\u00a0Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License<\/a><\/p>\n