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The Interactive/Collaborative Classroom Environment

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The Interactive/Collaborative Classroom Environment Staff Development: Le Cordon Bleu, College of Culinary Arts Dr. Barbara Packer-Muti Dr. Michael Simonson – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Interactive/Collaborative Classroom Environment


1
The Interactive/Collaborative Classroom
Environment
  • Staff Development Le Cordon Bleu, College of
    Culinary Arts
  • Dr. Barbara Packer-Muti
  • Dr. Michael Simonson

2
Learning Outcomes
  • Participants will be able to
  • Describe contrast cooperative learning,
    collaborative learning, and active learning
  • Demonstrate examples of at least three
    interactive classroom techniques
  • Discuss the responsibilities of the instructor
    and the learner
  • Demonstrate at least two active listening
    techniques

3
Out with the oldin with the new!
  • Changing paradigms The Old!
  • Transferring knowledge from faculty to students
  • Filling passive empty vessels with knowledge
  • Sorting students into categories
  • Conducting education in a context of impersonal
    relationships
  • Maintaining a competitive structure
  • Assume that content experts can teach..without
    training to do so

4
The new paradigm
  • Jointly constructed knowledge
  • Students actively participate, discover
  • Faculty develop students competencies and
    talents
  • Personal transactions
  • Cooperative learning in the class among faculty
  • Teaching requires training

5
Lectures Whats wrong with them?
  • Research shows
  • 1. Students recall 70 of the material covered
    in the 1st 10 mins 20 of the material in the
    last 10 minutes
  • 2. Students are tuned out of a 50 minute
    lecture about 40 of the time

6
One technique for your consideration
  • Steps to building an cooperative class
  • Read the assigned material in advance
  • Instructor does a highlights lecture for the
    1st 20 minutes
  • Students break into 3-5 groups to work on a
    pre-determined, assigned problem
  • Reconvene class for a brief closing lecture and
    common questions

7
Some Definitions
  • Active Learning
  • Anything students do in a classroom other than
    passively listen to a lecture
  • Cooperative Learning
  • Subset of active learning groups of 3 or more
    usually formally assigned, usually complex tasks
  • Collaborative Learning
  • Instructor students on equal footing working on
    designing assignments, choosing texts, presenting
    material

8
Techniques of Active Learning
  • The One Minute Paper
  • Muddiest (or Clearest) Point
  • Affective Response
  • Daily Journal
  • Reading Quiz
  • Clarification Pauses
  • Response to a demonstration or other
    teacher-centered activity

9
Class Activity!
  • Form seven groups
  • Hand outs
  • 5 Minutes to prepare
  • 2 Minutes to present
  • Summary
  • Feedback/Critique

10
Ten Tips for Effective Teaching
  • Teach according to your personality
  • Hand out a complete syllabus and course
    instructions on the first day
  • Vary your teaching methods
  • Let students choose their grades
  • Dont take attendance
  • Take a hard line on late and incomplete work
  • Give students options for assignments
  • Require clear and coherent work
  • Combat plagiarism
  • Get out of the way!

11
What are your responsibilities?
  • Content knowledge
  • Clear messages
  • Clarifying
  • Constructive feedback
  • Classroom management
  • Other thoughts? What else?

12
What are their responsibilities?
  • Active interest
  • Responsible for their own learning
  • Being engaged
  • What else?

13
The Syllabus Exercise
  • Hand out a sample syllabus
  • Find a partner (or 2)
  • Work together to find 3 questions about the
    course that are not clear
  • Present!
  • Summary feedback!

14
The Communication Process
  • Effective communication is key!
  • The message
  • The source
  • Field of experience
  • Communication competence
  • Encoding/decoding
  • The channel
  • The receiver
  • Feedback
  • Shared Meaning/Reality
  • The effect
  • Noise
  • The relationship
  • The context/situation

15
Questions and Answers
  • Suggestions to tweak our questioning techniques
    to increase student involvement comprehension

16
Wait Time
  • Instructor poses question, then waits 15 or so
    seconds.
  • No hand raising or calling out
  • Forces all students to think about the question
  • Ask for volunteers or call upon a student
  • Cold calls
  • Warm calls

17
Student Summary of Anothers Answer
  • Promotes active listening
  • Call upon a second student to summarize the first
    students response
  • Benefits include active participation students
    must listen to one another fosters the idea that
    learning is shared

18
The Fish Bowl
  • Students are given index cards
  • Students asked to write one question re course
    materials (consider applications of the material
    to practical contexts)
  • Questions are deposited into the fish bowl
  • Instructor chooses to respond or combines the
    previous techniques discussed!

19
Quiz/Test Questions
  • Students become involved in creating quizzes or
    tests by constructing some (or all) test items
  • May be assigned as homework and may be evaluated
  • Instructor may use these as the basis for the
    review
  • May begin the process of considering higher level
    thinking skills

20
Share/Pair
  • Grouping students in pairs provides opportunities
    for sharing their own personal viewpoints. Its
    almost impossible for someone to avoid
    participating in this sort of environment.

21
One more activity!
  • Get into a pair
  • Choose one of the following techniques
  • Discussion
  • Note comparison
  • Evaluation of another students work
  • Discuss and report back!

22
One more activity!
  • Form a pair
  • Choose one of the following techniques
  • Discussion
  • Note comparison
  • Evaluation of another students work
  • Report back to the group!

23
Effective Listening!
  • Be a model
  • Increased knowledge of the subject at hand
  • Greater self-confidence
  • Improved relationships

24
Donts!
  • Interrupts in mid-sentence or finishes the
    sentence!
  • Poor use of the thinking/speaking time
    differential
  • Changing the subject to fit the listeners agenda
  • Talking while the speaker is talking
  • Information overload

25
Non-verbal behaviors of poor listeners
  • Signs of impatience
  • Lacks direct eye contact
  • Maintains a closed body position
  • Fidgets
  • Fakes attention

26
Dos!
  • Limit your own talking
  • Ask questions/clarify
  • Paraphrase
  • Avoid interrupting
  • Concentrate on the message/speaker
  • Make positive comments
  • Listen for the feelings behind the words
  • Maintain control over your emotions
  • Make an effort to listen
  • Develop a Listening Challenge Plan

27
Listening Challenge Plan
  • Name of person
  • Reasons for difficulty
  • Specific steps I will initiate
  • How will I know Ive achieved my goals?

28
7 Principles for Good Practice in Undergraduate
Education
  • Encourage student-faculty contact
  • Encourage cooperation among students
  • Encourage active learning
  • Give prompt feedback
  • Emphasize active learning
  • Communicate high expectations
  • Respect diverse talents and ways of learning
  • Chickering, A., Gamson, Z. (1987).

29
Collegial Support Groups
  • Definition
  • Consists of 2-5 instructors who have the goal of
    improving each others instructional expertise
    and promoting each others professional growth

30
Keys to success in such groups
  • Frequent professional discussions of cooperative
    learning successes are shared problems are
    solved
  • Coplanning, codesigning, copreparing and
    coevaluating curriculum materials relevant to
    cooperative learning takes place
  • Coteaching and reciprocal observations of peers
    teaching lessons takes place

31
Leadership challenge!
  • Challenging the status quo
  • Inspiring a vision of what the school/college can
    be
  • Empowering through cooperative teams
  • Leading by example
  • Encouraging the heart

32
packerb_at_nova.edu
  • Thank you for actively listening!
  • Email me with questions/ideas
  • See you again soon!
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