Designing a tutorial; Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

17
Designing a tutorial; Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone Shantala Arundathi Hari Dass

description

Designing a tutorial; Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone. Shantala Arundathi Hari Dass. What were we teaching?. Course description: Basics of neuroscience Student background: Year three undergrads with this being their first formal exposure to neuroscience - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Designing a tutorial; Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Page 1: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Designing a tutorial; Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Shantala Arundathi Hari Dass

Page 2: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

What were we teaching?

▪ Course description: Basics of neuroscience▪ Student background: Year three undergrads with this

being their first formal exposure to neuroscience▪ Course Aim: To teach the content in 10 chapter of the

text book and make student critically analyze the material taught.

Page 3: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

How did we teach?

WEEK1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Introducing course and aligning students with aims of the course.

Re-teach any fuzzy topics

Chapters 1-10

LECTURE TUTORIAL

• Teacher Focused• Content heavy• Planned

• Student Focused• Facilitative

Page 4: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

What did we want to achieve in tutorials?

▪ Outcome led: Asses their knowledge

of the chapter taught▪ Dialogic : Provide a framework

for critical thinking▪ Participatory : Hear every voice ▪ Activity based: Scientific debate

Page 5: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Every voice must be heard!

Tutorial Structure

Phase 1:Read question and discuss in your group (10 min)Phase 2: 1 member moves to the next group and discusses answer (5 min)Phase 3: Students return to their groups. Tutors walk through and a group representative presents their answer. (30-40 min)Grading is groupwise.

Numbers: 240 students in 2 rooms + 2 tutors per room, Duration : 60 min

• Every student

must answer

ATLEAST once

• Students

must have

ATLEAST 70%

attendance

Page 6: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

What did the tutors have to say?

Too hectic!!We had to grade 10 groups each.

Students didn’t

have time to ask

any questions

Chaotic and

noisy

I only had time to

listen to factual and

superficial answers. I

couldn’t assess their

deeper understanding

of the subject.

I got to know most

students

personally

Students just gave one word answers and then went back to fiddling around on their phones. No discussions..

Page 7: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

And the students?

Boring!I was

only explaining

the answer to

the tutor for a

few minutes.

We only discussed 1-2 questions per week. I want more practice,

How w

ill

this

help

me for

the fi

nal

exam

?

Questions

were too easy.

I want an individual

grade. I provided the

answer every

week.

I had nothing

to discuss

when I went to

another group.

Everyone knew

the answer

I don’t know

how I fared.

How will I

improve?

Page 8: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

All in all how did we fare?

Hear every voiceGOOD

Tutors got to know each student personally. This made is easier for them to approach us with queries even after the tutorials were over. It gave the passive learners more confidence.

Provide a framework for critical thinking AVERAGE

Students didn’t have enough time to read the questions and understand what they were asking. They i recognised key words and gave associated terms as one word answers

Scientific debateAVERAGE

As students had only 10 minutes to ‘digest’ the questions. We noticed this wasn’t enough for them to come up answers.They spent most of the time looking through lecture notes for answers instead of debating.

Asses their knowledge of the chapter taught

AVERAGEElaborate set up did not allow for us

to assess anything beyond their superficial knowledge

Page 9: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Don’t sacrifice one learning aim for another!

While we managed

to (somewhat)

increase class

participation we did

this at the cost of

assessing the

students’ in-depth

understanding of

the material taught

Page 10: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Why didn’t the tutorial match our expectations?

▪ Students might have been satisfied with viewing subject material “through the lenses of their preinstructional conceptions *” only.

*(Duit and Treagust, 1995)

▪ Expecting too much too soon?..Students were not used to tutorial design and might found the logistics challenging. Subsequent trials might have worked better.

▪ Class size was too large.(This is not completely in the tutors power to change as class sizes are fixed by the university)

Page 11: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Possible alterations…

▪ Design assessments using Structure of Observed Learning Outcome (SOLO) Taxonomy to better understand the exact level of student learning.

Incr

easin

g de

pth

of

unde

rsta

ndin

g

54321  Pre-structural : acquiring bits of unconnected information

Unistructural: obvious connections are made, but their significance is not grasped.

 Multistructural: number of connections made but their significance is still lacking

Relational : appreciate the significance of the parts in relation to the whole

Extended abstract: make connections not only within the given subject area, but also beyond it, able to generalise

http://www.learningandteaching.info/learning/solo.htm

Page 12: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Possible alterations (contd)…

▪ Use clickers to provide instant feedback to students and teachers alike on the general level of understanding amongst student.

This is useful to test levels 1-3 in SOLO taxonomy▪ Make use of social media (facebook/twitter) as a platform for students to continue ongoing

discussions.

This enables two things: i. increase dialogues amongst students

ii. Gives a platform for students to post interesting associated readings

(this makes empowers them to be facilitators in their own learning)

iii. Helps shyer students/passive learners a space for asking questions/airing their views.

Page 13: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Modified tutorial structure

Prior to Tutorial▪ Provide every student with a clicker▪ Create a facebook page for the course with students, tutors and

course coordinator as members▪ Divide 120 students into 20 groups of 6.▪ Post a detailed case study online the evening before the tutorial with

questions matching SOLO taxonomy.

Page 14: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Modified tutorial structure (contd)..

During Tutorial0-10 min: Students answer questions 1-3 (of SOLO taxonomy) using clickers.

Show result immediately so students can evaluate themselves.10-25 min: Allow for discussion within group to clarify any doubts so far + Allow

group members to discuss their individual answers for question 4. 25-35 min: one group at random presents answer + other can rebut it. But don’t

let them endlessly argue it out. Present a model answer at the end and move on to question 5

35-45min: Allow group members to discuss their individual answers for question 5.

45-50 min: one group at random presents answer + other can rebut it. Don’t post the answer immediately but allow the discussion to continue on facebook for a day and then post it.

Page 15: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Modified tutorial structure (contd)..

After the Tutorial▪ Allot one group to present an SOLO taxonomy based assessment for

that topic online next week(along with an answer key after a few days). Encourage students to try to answer these

▪ Assesment Individual clicker scores: 30% Answer to question 4 + discussions: 15% Answer to question 4 + discussions: 15% Assesment designed : 40%

Page 16: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Associated readings▪ Claus Brabrand, C (2007) Constructive Alignment for Teaching Model-Based Design for Concurrence

▪ Fusch, D. (2011) Social Media and Student Learning: Moving the needle on engagement in Academic

▪ Impressions,ATHERTON, J. S. (2005) Learning and Teaching: SOLO taxonomy.

▪ ZHU,E (2007) Teaching With Clickers

▪ Furtak et. al. (2013). Challenges in Developing Classroom Assessments Linked to Multidimensional Learning Progressions .Paper presented at the National Association of Research on Science Teaching Annual International Conference, Puerto Rico, April 2013

▪ Duit R. and Treagust D.F., (1995), Students’ conceptions and constructivist teaching approaches. In

▪ B.J. Fraser and H.J. Walberg (Eds.), Improving science education, The National Society for the

▪ Study of Education, Chicago, IL, pp. 46-49

Page 17: Designing a tutorial;  Attempting to kill many birds with the same stone

Here I describe a tutorial on the 'Basics of neuroscience' that i conducted for year 3 undergraduate students. While designing the tutorial we set out to maximise student participation; every voice must be heard'! Along the way we realised that this was happening at thecost of accurately accessing student learning. We struggled with how to ago about designing tutorials tht tackle more than one aspect of learning.