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Flipping My Class – How to Maximize the Impact of Class Time Layne A. Morsch, PhD and Donna Bussell, PhD 2015 UIS Faculty Development Workshop March 11,

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Presentation on theme: "Flipping My Class – How to Maximize the Impact of Class Time Layne A. Morsch, PhD and Donna Bussell, PhD 2015 UIS Faculty Development Workshop March 11,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Flipping My Class – How to Maximize the Impact of Class Time Layne A. Morsch, PhD and Donna Bussell, PhD 2015 UIS Faculty Development Workshop March 11, 2015

2 Getting Started: For One of Your Courses....  What is the most difficult thing students are asked to do outside of class time?  Is it possible to move all or part of this into class time?  What could be moved out of class time to make room?  What could students do during class? Are there roles or tasks you can help them identify?  How could you interact with students during class to add value to the exercise?  What work should the students do in advance to be ready for this class module?

3 Are My Students Engaged? Lecture of Henricus de Alemania by Laurentius de Voltolina, 1350

4 Are My Students Engaged? Laurentius de Voltolina, 1350

5 Vital Questions  What is the best use of my face time with students  What is the most difficult thing students are asked to do during the week? – Can this be moved into class time where we can guide them on it?

6 Vital Questions- Answers for Organic Chemistry  What is the most difficult thing students are asked to do during the week? Solve complicated problems using application and synthesis of lecture material  Can this be moved into class time where we can guide them on it? There isn’t enough time with all the lecture material that must be covered.  What is the best use of my face time with students? Guiding them through solution process and engaging them with the work of solving the problems

7 Vital Questions- Answers for English Literature & Linguistics  What is the most difficult thing students are asked to do during the week? Analytical reading, concept practice, and research/ project organization.  Can this be moved into class time where we can guide them on it? Yes, if context lectures, assignment instructions, and some content / method coverage is moved online or to outside class time. Some context & content instruction [and even course design] could be done / presented by students  What is the best use of my face time with students? Critiquing presentations, project process/progress, context reports, concept practice (linguistics), short analytical readings.

8 Overcoming these obstacles – Recording lectures so students can view them on their own time – All lectures recorded using Camtasia Studio, Bamboo tablet, microphone, Autodesk Sketchbook Express

9 Overcoming these obstacles – Chapters broken down into multiple videos (length 3:08 to 10:43) Total videos length 6:42:46 Average video length 7:04 Why?

10 Optimal Video Length Guo, Philip J., Juho Kim, and Rob Rubin. "How video production affects student engagement: An empirical study of mooc videos." In Proceedings of the first ACM conference on Learning@ scale conference, pp. 41- 50. ACM, 2014.

11 What good are videos?  The value of the video lecture is that it moves the less interactive portion of the course to outside class time  The real value of the videos is what they allow time for in class…

12 Overcoming obstacles: English Classroom as Language Lab  Selected context and content material on BB  Short quizzes on context / content info or daily student presentations on single questions or concept  Extended, staged assignments: Ongoing, multistep assignments and assessments so students are running the show during class time. (presentations, poster session, etc.)  Discrete Trial Training approach: Faculty Demo /Immediate Student Practice

13 Works as Lo-Tech or Hi-Tech  Questions of scale  Uses of resources: – Small group work with 10-to-60+ students – White boards and BB/Blogs for Poster Sessions – Clickers / Response Analytics / Index cards! – Oral presentation w/wo PPT/Prezi on iPads – TechSmith/Camtasia Relay: student responses via audio / video (Performance Pressure!)

14 In Class Problem Solving  In-Class Problem Solving was the focus of the majority of class time  Problems would be solved individually or in small groups followed by detailed solutions  Students would be given problems to solve, then were asked to explain the solution to their neighbor

15 Working Problems at Boards  Placed a problem or two on each board and asked students to come up to solve  Occasionally bribed them with candy if they were the first with a correct answer  Spring/Summer classroom had 6 whiteboards surrounding room

16 Analysis of Classroom Data

17  Will my attendance drop?  Do I need to give points for watching the videos? – Spring 2014 (with points) avg view 92.9% – Summer 2014 (no points, in class quiz) avg. view 95.9%

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21 Improved Learning Environment  100% engagement in problem solving  Students get more direction in problem solving with many more examples  Increased professor-student interaction  Students get a chance to teach each other

22 Difficulties  Some students do not like change  Large time investment to begin (recording and editing all the videos)  Had to redefine my classroom preparation – Still working on this  Defining my expectations

23 Next Steps...  How can you encourage/force the students to complete this preparation?  How could this activity contribute to the learning outcomes of your course?  What work do you need to do in advance to prepare students for the in-class experience?  What other tools or expertise would you need to make this successful?  How will you evaluate if this module has been effective or if modifications are needed?

24 Acknowledgments  Dr. Matt Stoltzfus, The Ohio State Univerity  Dr. Danae Quirk-Dorr, Minnesota State University, Mankato  Dr. Simon Lancaster, East Anglia University  Chris Luker, Kent State University  Kara McElwrath, UIS Assistant Director of Client Services  Farokh Eslahi, UIS CIO Questions?

25 Resources  Kara McElwrath, kmcel2@uis.edukmcel2@uis.edu  Jeff Sudduth, jsudd3@uis.edujsudd3@uis.edu  7 Things you should know about Flipped Classrooms http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI7081.pdf 7 Things you should know about Flipped Classrooms http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI7081.pdf Questions?


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