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Podcast: Teaching In Higher Ed: Faculty Development for Professors To Facilitate Learning for Students
Episode:

Peer instruction and audience response systems

Category: Education
Duration: 00:35:34
Publish Date: 2015-06-18 00:00:29
Description:

Peter Newbury joins me to talk about peer instruction and using clickers in the higher ed classroom.

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Early experiences with clickers

The Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative

Achieving the most effective, evidence-based science education
(effective science education, backed by evidence)

The Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative (CWSEI) is a multi-year project at The University of British Columbia aimed at dramatically improving undergraduate science education.

The CWSEI helps departments take a four-step, scientific approach to teaching:

  • Establish what students should learn
  • Scientifically measure what students are actually learning
  • Adapt instructional methods and curriculum and incorporate effective use of technology and pedagogical research to achieve desired learning outcomes
  • Disseminate and adopt what works

The Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative resources on general teaching, clickers, and peer instruction

Today's use of clickers and other audience response systems

Whether we are using physical devices, such as clickers, or we are using more of a bring your own device / smart phone /tablet option, it's really just a tool.

“I certainly don’t want to say that in order to use peer instruction, you have to have this piece of technology. It’s not about the clicker.” #peerinstruction

“Peer instruction is not a shiny thing that comes with clickers. Clickers are one tool you can use to facilitate peer learning.”

Peer Instruction foundations

Peer Instruction Fundamentals

How People Learn (free ebook) states that experts must:

  • Have a deep foundation of factual knowledge
  • Understand those facts and concepts in a conceptual framework
  • Organize the knowledge in ways that facilitate retrieval and application

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More on peer instruction basics:

  • “If I’m not making your brains work, then I’m not teaching hard enough.”
  • “We need to schedule time into the class where students can stop and think, and start to learn.”
  • “Just stop talking for a while and let the students start to think.”

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Effective Peer Instruction Questions

Experts vs novices

“The expert has the same content as the novice, but it’s organized [and more easily retrieved]…”

Recommendations

Bonni recommends:

Peter recommends:

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Thanks to Peter Newbury for being a guest on Teaching in Higher Ed

You can follow Peter on Twitter at @polarisdotca and read his blog about teaching and learning at peternewbury.org.

 

 

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