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How do we learn in our leisure activities

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Presentation on theme: "How do we learn in our leisure activities"— Presentation transcript:

1 How do we learn in our leisure activities
How do we learn in our leisure activities? ~ some ideas for teaching medical statistics Fiona Reid King’s College London

2 Are you here?

3

4 Kayaking – what’s to learn?
Moving forwards, backwards, sideways, turning Staying upright – support strokes, eskimo roll Entering a current; crossing a river; negotiating rapids Learning to ‘read’ the water – optimal route down the river, spotting hazards Safety, risk management, and rescue Planning journeys, protecting the environment, river access

5 My canoeing CV Started canoeing in 1990
Mix of white water, sea kayaking, slalom Member of Civil Service Canoe Club (weekly trips to pub on the Thames every Tuesday, new members welcome!) Attended courses at Plas y Brenin; Plas Menai; National Whitewater Centre Bala – personal skills; safety and rescue; and instructor training. British Canoe Union, Level 3 Coach, 1998

6 Honey & Mumford – learning styles
Honey & Mumford’s 80-item Learning Styles Questionnaire (1982, 1992, 2000) Based on earlier work by Kolb 4 styles: Activist, Reflector, Pragmatist, Theorist ‘No single style has an overwhelming advantage over any other. Each has strengths and weaknesses, but the strengths may be especially important in one situation, but not in another.’

7 learn by doing; like to dive in to activity
Honey & Mumford want to understand the underlying theory and models; analyse new information and check for logic concerned with how the learning can be put into practice in the real world; what’s the utility? learn by observing and thinking it over; like to stand back and view from different perspectives learn by doing; like to dive in to activity

8 Kayaking example – How to turn the boat in a circle?
Honey & Mumford Kayaking example – How to turn the boat in a circle? Activists Straight into activity, immediately explanation is finished Reflectors Want to watch some demonstrations first, ask some questions, check the task Pragmatists Ask ‘Why would I ever want to turn my boat in a circle?’ Theorists Ask why should the instructions work? e.g. ‘Why does putting the blade in the water further away from the kayak help the boat to turn?’

9 Statistics example – Tutorial on interpreting p-values
Honey & Mumford Statistics example – Tutorial on interpreting p-values Activists Launch straight into exercise; not overly worried if some things still unclear Reflectors Hesitant to start exercise or contribute to debate, wants to think it over, e.g. how does it all fit with previous teaching? Pragmatists Ask ‘Why do we need p-values’? Theorists Ask ‘How exactly are p-values calculated?’ – not happy to take on trust

10 Caveats Honey & Mumford
65% of students do not express a single strong preference – most are a mixture of different styles Little evidence that matching teaching methods to learning styles influences outcomes ‘The labels are a convenient oversimplification – a starting point for discussion on how an individual learns’

11 How can we use this? Honey & Mumford
Expect a variety of responses in the statistics class – greater patience with students? Be prepared with flexible teaching options; may need to explain in more than one way Consider our own preferred learning style – do we teach in the way we like to learn? – need more empathy with students different to ourselves? Can gently encourage students to move from one learning style to another, if they are ‘stuck’

12 ‘Guided Discovery’ approach
Students are encouraged to discover the best approach by themselves, with a little help Kayaking – How to cross a white water current? Ask for ideas; just have a go; what would happen if you try X or Y…? e.g. try pointing boat more or less upstream – what works best? B A Statistics – How to evaluate a new clinical treatment? Suggest no control group to start, ask students to critique; then comparing with historical data; then with a concurrent control but not randomised; eventually they will hopefully invent the RCT!

13 ‘Sequencing’ approach
Complex skills are broken down and then developed incrementally Kayaking – Learning to eskimo roll Component parts – the support stroke; the ‘hip flick’; correct paddle hold; correct starting position … Statistics – Selecting a significance test Component parts – types of data; the normal distribution; paired vs independent groups; equality of variances …

14 ‘Client-centred’ approach
Focuses on the student’s aspirations, and jointly construct personal learning outcomes Kayaking – Ask about prior experience; what do they hope to achieve from kayaking course?; adapt learning opportunities to meet student aspirations, where possible Statistics – Ask about prior experience (and offer ‘remedial’ help); ask students what they want to get out of statistics course; could we set personal learning outcomes, as well as curriculum-driven? … and adapt learning opportunities to reflect these?

15 Giving feedback Kayaking – Usually individual; as close to activity as possible (often during); repeated; constructive; formative assessment >> summative; gives sense of achievement Statistics – Individual feedback in small group tutorials; incorporate questions / quizzes / mini-exercises into lectures; online exercises … other ideas?

16 OVER TO YOU …. Examples of good practice in teaching from your own leisure activities? or children’s? What is your preferred learning style Activist, Reflector, Pragmatist, Theorist? and does this influence your teaching style? Examples of Guided Discovery, Sequencing, Client-centred approaches from your teaching?


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