JOINT OWNERSHIP OF LEARNING
Robert Carroll has written an interesting opinion piece about the teacher-student
relationship. At its essence, it is about engagement but he frames it in terms
of an athletic performance. He asks "So why do we, as teachers, still
exist? The formal education process is no longer about information, and
successful teachers have come to realize this. The ability of learners to
access information has increased to the point of absurdity. The role of the
teacher now is to help learners effectively identify and evaluate information
sources, but this alone does not justify our continued presence in the
educational process." He continues, "While learning is self-directed,
it is the teacher that is accountable for the learning: accountable to
the students, to the program, and to themselves. Courses flourish when the
student-teacher relationship is reciprocal and includes “joint ownership” of
the course. And the responsibility flows both ways–a student performing poorly is a failure on my part, and I
work with them to get them to perform to the best of their ability."
GROUP DISCUSSION WITH A TWIST
We have encouraged you to use class discussion as an active learning method
in your classes and we have provided teaching and learning faculty development
workshops in the past to provide you with the information and tools to
implement this learning experience. B. J. Brooks and M. D. Koretsky provide a
twist on this active learning method in their article "The Influence of Group
Discussion on Students' Responses and Confidence During Peer Instruction"
published in the Journal of Chemical Education. They advocate that you
allow your student to respond to a discussion question individually in writing
and then have them share that answer with two or three colleagues. After the
discussion, the students can change their answers, write another explanation
for the answer and once again indicate their degree of confidence in their answer.
The research shows that the learning experience provided a richer understanding
of the answer and improved their confidence level in having the correct answer.
The depth of their explanation was enhanced as well. Students spent an average
of seven minutes in discussion making this an active learning method that can
be used each time you meet as a class. The research also confirmed that when
faced with conceptual problems, students need the opportunity to practice
problem solving and the discussion improves their ability to explain why the
answer is correct.
CLOSING OUT A SEMESTER POSITIVELY
A fellow faculty development colleague reminds us that the end of the
semester is the time to do some assessment that will provide you with valuable
feedback as you plan for the next semester. There are a number of things you
can do to help your students transition to the next phase of their academic
careers or workforce lives. He suggests, "Just as you discussed the
syllabus on the first day of class, do so again, this time to reaffirm that
learning outcomes have been met and to remind students of the material that has
been covered. Of course, it is a good idea to review that syllabus a few weeks
out from the end of the semester to make sure that the outcomes have been met.
The review can be done as a large group discussion, or you might assign groups
within the class to assess how well the course had fulfilled its outcomes,
material coverage, and other goals."
MUSIC DELIVERS IN THE ONLINE ENVIRONMENT
When designing and teaching a course through the online delivery method,
research shows that you should build in authentic and relevant opportunities
for your students to interact, connect, and present themselves as real people. Students see these opportunities to socially
interact and connect with others as foundational attributes of your courses.
Further, research suggests that opportunities like these influence students’
perception of the overall learning experience. Joanna Dunlap and Patrick
Lowenthal conducted research in this area and suggest that using music as one
of a number of ways to help students interact and connect with each other can
produce positive student learning results. Music offers a way to involve students in
student-to-content interaction through generative learning activities—by having
students compile playlists, write lyrics, compose songs, perform songs, create
music videos, and so on. Music-driven, student-to-content interaction also
involves students in multisensory learning, further supporting knowledge
acquisition and construction. They provide a number of discipline specific
active learning methods that you can integrate into your online class.