While I don't usually respond to ECOLOG comments, the recent set of exchanges on 'active teaching' is something I feel compelled to say something about.

Below is a section from a 2004 Science article by J. Handelsman et al. titled "Scientific Teaching" (304: 521). The authors propose several reasons why scientists who "demand rigorous proof for scientific assertions" continue to rely on intuition and personal experience when discussing effectiveness of teaching methods. These reasons include scientists being unaware of the many studies and data showing the effectiveness of active teaching.

"Since publication of the AAAS 1989 report "Science for all Americans" commissions, panels, and working groups have agreed that reform in science education should be founded on "scientific teaching," in which teaching is approached with the same rigor as science at its best . Scientific teaching involves active learning strategies to engage students in the process of science and teaching methods that have been systematically tested and shown to reach diverse students . Given the widespread agreement, it may seem surprising that change has not progressed rapidly nor been driven by the research universities as a collective force. Instead, reform has been initiated by a few pioneers, while many other scientists have actively resisted changing their teaching. So why do outstanding scientists who demand rigorous proof for scientific assertions in their research continue to use and, indeed, defend on the basis of the intuition alone, teaching
methods that are not the most effective?"

Talking about student-active teaching is a very long conversation. There's a huge literature in all STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math) areas. But just a few things: 1) Faculty who use active teaching also lecture - they are not incompatible and actually should be complimentary, 2) of course active teaching, like lecturing, can be done well or poorly, 3) there are many, many different ways to engage in active teaching. The teaching section of TIEE (Teaching Issues and Experiments in Ecology), tiee.ecoed.net/teach/teach.html, has some information about active teaching. Also, TIEE has both Issues and Experiments in which students work with data, figures from papers, and do lab and field experiments centered about key ecological concepts and ideas. All TIEE materials include assessment/evaluation - which is key to scientific teaching.




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Charlene

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Charlene D'Avanzo
Professor of Ecology &
Director, Center for Learning
Hampshire College

Homepage: http://helios.hampshire.edu/~cdNS/
TIEE: http://tiee.ecoed.net/

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