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Teaching Strategies for Instructors of the Physical Sciences UNC Orientation for New Graduate Students Fall 2001 Presented by Duane Deardorff Director.

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Presentation on theme: "Teaching Strategies for Instructors of the Physical Sciences UNC Orientation for New Graduate Students Fall 2001 Presented by Duane Deardorff Director."— Presentation transcript:

1 Teaching Strategies for Instructors of the Physical Sciences UNC Orientation for New Graduate Students Fall 2001 Presented by Duane Deardorff Director of Undergraduate Laboratories Dept. of Physics and Astronomy

2 Introduction Which department are you from? Will you teach labs, recitations, or a course? What teaching techniques are you aware of? What do you hope to learn from this session?

3 Workshop Goals Learn teaching strategies to add to your teaching tool box. Develop plan to implement teaching tools.

4 Summary of PER Findings Traditional lecturing is not as effective as active-engagement methods of instruction. Students are not “blank slates.” They construct new knowledge based on their prior experiences and beliefs. Students’ knowledge is not as well-organized as that of experts. Research-based curricula can improve students’ conceptual understanding.

5 Active Learning Fifty years of modern scientific research has yielded the same conclusion stated hundreds of years earlier by Confucius.

6 Active Learning Fifty years of modern scientific research has yielded the same conclusion stated hundreds of years earlier by Confucius. I hear and I forget, I see and I remember, I do and I understand. - Chinese proverb

7 Cooperative Learning Groups Requirements for successful cooperative learning:

8 Cooperative Learning Groups Requirements for successful cooperative learning: Positive interdependence

9 Cooperative Learning Groups Requirements for successful cooperative learning: Positive interdependence Individual accountability

10 Cooperative Learning Groups Requirements for successful cooperative learning: Positive interdependence Individual accountability Face-to-face interaction

11 Cooperative Learning Groups Requirements for successful cooperative learning: Positive interdependence Individual accountability Face-to-face interaction Appropriate use of interpersonal skills

12 Cooperative Learning Groups Requirements for successful cooperative learning: Positive interdependence Individual accountability Face-to-face interaction Appropriate use of interpersonal skills Regular group self-assessment

13 Peer Instruction, Think-Pair-Share Instructor poses a challenging question Students commit to an answer individually Instructor calls for class vote (~50% correct) Students discuss answers with neighbors After several minutes, students vote again, this time about 80% of students are correct. Instructor summarizes correct reasoning.

14 What does the scale read? A) 0 B) 5 lbs. C) 10 lbs. 5 lbs

15 Interactive Lecture Demonstrations Lecture demonstrations are most effective when there is an active-learning component. Students predict the outcome of a demo Instructor performs demo and discusses Ideal for pre-lab presentations

16 Socratic Dialogue Ask students leading questions instead of giving an answer that will be easily forgotten. S: “Isn’t the ball’s acceleration zero at the top?” T: “What is the definition of acceleration?” S: “It’s the change in the velocity.” T: “Is the direction of the velocity changing?” S: “Yes, so I guess the acceleration is not zero.” T: “Right!”

17 Scaffolding Guidance and structure are removed as students gain experience. Useful for learning experimental design –Transition from “cookbook” to open-ended labs

18 Model-Coach-Fade Complex tasks require guidance and practice: Model what is expected (show example) Coach students as they practice Fade until students can master on their own This technique is ideal for recitations.

19 Bridging Connects students’ common-sense beliefs to an intended way of thinking that may not make sense at first. Example: The question about scale force.

20 Learning Styles Visual/Verbal Active/Reflective Intuitive/Sensing Inductive/Deductive Sequential/Global Try to match your teaching style to your students’ learning styles:

21 Relevant Applications Abstract concepts can be made real by giving students examples of applications Motivates interest - good for introduction After instruction, ask students to think of other applications

22 Analogies This is another way to connect with the familiar. Examples: Electric current is like water flowing in pipes Voltage is like water pressure Resistance is like a constriction in the pipe An emf is like a pump

23 Multiple Representations Words, symbols, diagrams, math, graphs: acceleration a dv/dt v t a a

24 Mnemonics Sine isMercuryMy Opposite overVenusVery Hypoteneuse.EarthEducated Cosine isMarsMother Adjacent overJupiterJust Hypoteneuse.SaturnServed Tangent isUranusUs Opposite overNeptuneNine Adjacent.PlutoPizza Planet XPies “ELI the ICE man”

25 GOAL Problem-Solving Strategy Gather information Organize your approach Analyze the problem Learn from your efforts

26 Concept Tests 30+ diagnostic test instruments for physics alone FCI - Force Concept Inventory TUG-K - Test of Understanding Graphs FMCE - Force and Motion Concept Exam CSEM - Conceptual Survey of Electricity and Magnetism MPEX - Maryland Physics Expectations

27 Minute Paper What is the main thing you learned today? What questions do you still have?

28 What can you use in your teaching? Think-Pair-Share Cooperative Learning Demonstrations Socratic dialogue Model-coach-fade Scaffolding Bridging Learning styles Representations Analogies Mnemonics GOAL Concept Tests Minute Paper


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