SUMMER IS ABOUT COURSE REDESIGN
Dr. Maryellen Weimer has an interesting article about course redesign. She notes, introductory courses are packed with content. Teachers struggle to
get through it during class; students struggle to master it outside of
class. Too often learning consists of memorizing material that’s used on
the exam but not retained long after. Faculty know they should use more
strategies that engage students, but those approaches take time and, in
most courses, that’s in very short supply. Blended-learning designs can be used to help with the problem.
Technology offers other options for dealing with course content. This
article recounts one faculty member’s experiences
redesigning a gateway cell biology course. In a nutshell, all the
lecture content was recorded as 10-20 minute voiceover PowerPoint
presentations. Class time was devoted to “activities … entirely focused
on student engagement with the content and with each other.” (p. 35)
What happened in class did not repeat the content but was based on
assigned readings in the text and material covered in the recorded
lectures. A variety of interesting classroom activities was used, including a
version of the time-tested muddiest-point strategy. Upon arriving in
class students submitted index cards with questions about things from
the readings or the lecture that they did not understand. A sample of
these questions was read aloud and then students and the professor
discussed and answered them. Students also participated in another
index-card activity that presented them with a scenario or experimental
data not discussed in the lectures or readings. Students worked on these
questions in small groups and then developed and submitted a group
answer. During class the instructor also had students respond to
questions using clickers.
RESOURCES FOR YOU
Student engagement is just as critical in the online delivery mode as it is in face-to-face classes. If you are looking to add some active learning experiences to your eLearning course or would like to enhance your f2f classroom, you might want to take a look at the Interactive Activities in Online and Hybrid Courses website. There are examples of individual as well as collaborative learning experiences. Dr. Betsy Winston also presents a number of learning experience ideas in her article Enhancing Critical Thinking and Active Learning in Online Courses.
IS THERE A SUCCESS GENE
Paul Voosen reports on the search for a "gene for finishing college." The article points out that there will never be a “gene for educational success” or a “gene for
entrepreneurship,” just as there will never be a “gene for intelligence”
or a “gene for personality.” He notes that the research reveals that there is a gene variant that increases the likelihood to read books, and
it is the reading, in turn, that helps determine scholastic futures. He suggests that we still encourage kids who don’t have
the variant to read and that will raise their chances for educational success.
SUB-PRIME STUDENTS
Did you catch the comment by Trace Urdan about "subprime students." Apparently in a public debate, Urdan argued with David Halperin that the relatively low graduation rates of
many for-profit colleges were actually pretty good, when compared to
their subsidized competition (community colleges). Halperin countered,
correctly, that it’s misleading to characterize most for-profits as
unsubsidized, given their heavy reliance on Federal financial aid. Matt Read said in his blog post "But
the line that jumped out at me was Urdan’s assertion that “[the] school
offers quality instruction. The students make of it what they will.” He continues, "If
your unit of analysis is the disconnected individual, then it follows
that any failures must be the fault of those individuals. If you have
low graduation rates, you must have subprime students. It’s a convenient belief, because it lets everyone else off the hook. If people rise or fall entirely on their own merits, then those who
fell must lack merit. If they lack merit, then their failure is nothing
to worry about. After all, if they had merit, they wouldn’t have
failed!" he concluded.