1 / 17

Flipping the Classroom 1

Flipping the Classroom 1. Suzanna Magnuson Chemistry Teacher Natick High School. What does “flipping” mean? . Discussion: The Dog Ate My Homework! Summarize the TED Talk video with Sal Khan from Khan Academy Discuss any thoughts, pros, cons, reactions to him, etc. .

langer
Download Presentation

Flipping the Classroom 1

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 the Classroom 1 Suzanna Magnuson Chemistry Teacher Natick High School

  2. What does “flipping” mean? Discussion: The Dog Ate My Homework! • Summarize the TED Talk video with Sal Khan from Khan Academy • Discuss any thoughts, pros, cons, reactions to him, etc.

  3. What does “flipping” mean? Historical Perspective: • Bergman & Sams 2006-2007: “Educational Vodcasting” • Other terms: Flex-pacing, mastery model, pre-teaching, blended learning, reverse-instruction. • “Flip” term came about in 2010-2011 and borrowed by Sal Khan in TED talk

  4. What does “flipping” mean? Problem: Umbrella, vague term for: • Live recording • Flipping • Flipping w/ • mastery learning • mastery & inquiry learning • mastery, inquiry, and standards-based grading • mastery, inquiry, standards-based grading, & universal design for learning

  5. What does “flipping” mean? Ways “flipping” can be used: • Pre-teaching • Remediation/re-teaching • Reinforcing/reviewing • Enrichment • A way to handle absences • Filling in gaps of understanding

  6. What does “flipping” mean? Aaron Sams summarizes: Think of “flipping” as an umbrella term for: “a class that uses screencasts as an instructional tool.” From: “The Flipped Class: Shedding Light on the Confusion, Critique, and Hype”

  7. Why would you flip your class? Research: The Envision Experiment, Oakland, CA 2011: • Khan Academy & Oakland school chose 25 students in remedial algebra summer class • Half received instruction from a dedicated, experienced teacher; other half used Khan Academy videos, but had same teacher http://www.blendmylearning.com/2011/08/31/the-results/

  8. Why would you flip your class? Research: U of British Columbia, 2011: Large enrollment physics college class • Two groups: traditional lecture (control) and pre-learning with in-class practice • Dramatic increase in scores for experimental group

  9. Why would you flip your class? Personal Journey • Student 2 years ago introduced me to Khan Academy • Used in my own master’s degree program • Realized that if it helped me, it could help my students

  10. Why would you flip your class? Positives from Student Feedback • Can pause, rewind, review for test • Convenient when absent • Easier to understand than textbook • Good base of knowledge so class is more interactive • Better for taking notes; don’t have to scramble • Good visuals

  11. Why would you flip your class? Negatives from Student Feedback • Can’t ask questions • Sometimes confusing • Have to watch on your own time; too much HW • Some are too long; hard to concentrate • Could make better use of in-class time • If you forget, you’re behind in class • No effort into HW: just copying answers • Too many distractions at home • No computer at home; no internet access at home

  12. Why would you flip your class? Discussion: To flip or not to flip… • What could be gained by flipping? • What are the cons of flipping?

  13. How would you flip your class? When to flip: • Clear, concise objective: decide on what they will be able to do by the end of the video • Decide on the source: created or found • Decide what you will do with your extra time

  14. How would you flip your class? When flipping is a flop: • If the lesson topic can be taught in a student-centered way (w/o direct instruction) • If the lesson topic is not concise and simple (5-10 minutes maximum) • If you have no meaningful use for the class time you gain

  15. How would you flip your class? A tour of my flipping style: • Write lessons on screen w/sketch pad • Use QuickTime & iMovie to record & edit • Post to YouTube (unlisted) • Embed onto blog on website • Students watch at home and/or in class* • Class time used to process, practice, apply in lab, ask questions, projects, etc. *In Class: surprising find from last year’s flipping workshop!

  16. How would you flip your class? Discussion: Flipping for Smarties • Think of one specific video you would produce to test drive the flipped model. • What is/are the objective(s) of the video? • How will students be accountable for watching the assigned video? • What will you do as a follow up activity to the video lesson?

  17. Bibliography Greenberg, Brian. "The Results." Blend My Learning. Innosite Institute, Next Generation Learning Challenges, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Charter School Growth Fund, 2011. Web. 05 Nov. 2012. <http:// www.blendmylearning.com/2011/08/31/the-results/>. Improved Learning in a Large-Enrollment Physics Class Louis Deslauriers, Ellen Schelew, and Carl Wieman, Science 13 May 2011: 862-864. Sams, Aaron. "The Flipped Class: Shedding Light on the Confusion, Critique, and Hype." The Daily Riff: Be Smarter. About Education. C.J. Westerberg, 11 Nov. 2011. Web. 04 Nov. 2012. <http://www.thedailyriff.com/articles/the-flipped- class-shedding-light-on-the-confusion-critique-and-hype-801.php>.

More Related