1 / 21

Flipping Your Classroom

Flipping Your Classroom. By Jean Andrews. Turning the educational process from teacher-focused to student-focused. Students. Instructor. Instructor. Students. What is flipping?. “If I could only get my students to work half as hard as I do…” “I’m exhausted at the end of the day.”

elie
Download Presentation

Flipping Your Classroom

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. Flipping Your Classroom By Jean Andrews

  2. Turning the educational process from teacher-focusedto student-focused Students Instructor Instructor Students What is flipping?

  3. “If I could only get my students to work half as hard as I do…” • “I’m exhausted at the end of the day.” • “I don’t know if my students are learning until I grade their homework or test.” • “Students learn math by doing math, not by listening to someone talk about doing math.” Reasons to flip

  4. Flip classroom time • Flip mastery of content • Flip the content • Flip assessment • Flip the responsibility for learning Instructor Students Instructor Students Flipping what?

  5. Passive learning happens outside class • Video your own lectures and post online • Use videos made by others (share resources) • Explanations in text or audio • Assign lectures as “homework” • Active learning happens in class • Students work on their “homework” in class • Instructors or lab assistants help individuals or small group 1. Flipping classroom time

  6. No need to repeat lectures • Active learning is given prime time • Students get more individual help • Better chance to get to know your students Why flip class time?

  7. Class moves in unison • Assign tasks and don’t encourage work ahead OR • Allow students to control their learning pace • Work from a list of detailed objectives • Document expectations and activities • Digital test banks • Mandatory attendance 2. Flipping mastery of content

  8. Changing the way students learn • From passive learning to active learning • Learn by poking around, trying something, making mistakes, try again, use the Help feature, and “google it.” • Wing students from step-by-steps. 3. Flipping how content is learned

  9. “Research-Based Strategies to Ignite Student Learning” by Judy Willis, M.D., 2008 Excellent resource

  10. So that more learning goes from short-term to long-term memory Why flip content?

  11. You provide the assessment tool • Students convince you they know the content • Repeat knowledge • Demonstrate skills • Teach others • Make a contribution • Practically speaking • “I want my students making the videos.” • “Work ahead so you can teach others who are behind.” • Some objective assessment is necessary. 4. Flipping assessment

  12. Provide a learning path for students to follow • Provide tools students need • Be available to help • Reward those who accept responsibility • Expect students to contribute to others 5. Flipping responsibility for learning

  13. Path 1: Passing score Done Objectives check off with access to all content Pretest At least one question for each listed objective Start Post test Path 2: Medium score Done Activities 2 Post test Done Activities 1 Activities 2 Path 3: Low score Example of learning paths

  14. Emporium course • Development math program at Virginia Tech • Student-centered learning course • PC Repair course at College of DuPage • Buffet course • Statistics class at Ohio State • Redesign course • Spanish Transition course at University of Tennessee • Fully online course • Visual and Performing Arts course at Florida Gulf Coast University • Flipped course • Three computer science courses at Stanford University Other names for flipping

  15. Flexibility • New ways of doing things • No silver bullet or one right way to flip • Computer labs with generous hours • Personalized on-demand assistance • Mandatory student participation • Plenty of digital resources (The real advantage of IT in education!) Necessary for flipping

  16. Videos of lectures and explanations • Interactive computer software (MyITLab) • Diagnostic assessments • Online practice quizzes (large database) • Computerized grading with instant feedback • Offload grading to technology • On-demand content when student is stuck Digital resources for flipping

  17. Students spend more time on task than listening to a lecture • Students spend more time on content they know the least • Students learn by doing • Students can prove mastery quickly and move on • Students get more individual help and develop relationships with faculty • Grades and mastery improve (from 40% to 70% pass rate for one study) • Lower cost per student (30% savings for one school) Some results of flipping

  18. How do you spend your time? • Less prep time for lecture • More time interacting with students • More time supervising lab assistants • Less time grading homework/quizzes/exams • Less “stand and deliver” and more “one on one” More results of flipping

  19. What can go wrong? • Administrative by-in • Lack of digital resources • Lack of flexibility to adjust to emerging needs • Lack of statistics proving results (grades/cost/time) • Students don’t have computers or Internet access • Lack of setting expectations from day one (hard to flip in the middle of a course) • Not sticking it out past the initial shock to students (not the easy way out for students and often a culture shock) From a flip to a flop???

  20. National Center for Academic Transformation at www.thencat.org • Flipped Learning Network at flippedclassroom.org • “Flip Your Classroom” by Jonathan Bergmann and Aaron Sams • Khan Academy at www.khanacademy.org • “Jump Right In” by Jean Andrews Resources for flippers

  21. Jean Andrews • jeanandrews@mindspring.com Contact Info

More Related