Ecolog:

This might be of interest to all teachers, not to mention students. 

WT


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Rick Reis 
To: tomorrows-professor 
Sent: Tuesday, April 26, 2011 6:27 AM
Subject: TP Msg. #1096 Lose the Lectures


As a young physics professor at Harvard in the 1980s, Eric Mazur was certain 
his lecture-hall classes were a huge success. And why wouldn’t they be? His 
students got top grades, and his teaching evaluations were stellar. But in the 
early ’90s, Mazur gave some of his students a series of tests that clearly 
showed they didn’t understand the underlying concepts of what he was teaching 
them — even the most basic. “My illusion of being a good teacher became 
unraveled,” Mazur admits.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------




TOMORROW'S PROFESSOR(sm) eMAIL NEWSLETTER
http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept-ctl/cgi-bin/tomprof/postings.php




Archives of all past postings can be found at:
http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept-ctl/cgi-bin/tomprof/postings.php




Sponsored by
Stanford Center for Teaching and Learning
http://ctl.stanford.edu


Folks:

The posting below looks at the work of the innovator of "peer instruction" and 
the huge impact this approach= is having on student learning.  It by  Thomas K. 
Grose and is from Prism, February, 2011. Copyright 2011
 American Society for 
Engineering Education
 1818 N Street, N.W., Suite 600
Washington, DC 20036-2479

 Web: www.asee.org Telephone: (202) 331-3500. Reprinted with permission.

Regards,

Rick Reis
[email protected]
UP NEXT: Joining Your Department and Discipline - Negotiating Tips 


Tomorrow's Teaching and Learning


------------------------------------ 578 words 
----------------------------------------


Lose the Lectures

A physics professor relies on Q&A, class discussions.

As a young physics professor at Harvard in the 1980s, Eric Mazur was certain 
his lecture-hall classes were a huge success. And why wouldn’t they be? His 
students got top grades, and his teaching evaluations were stellar. But in the 
early ’90s, Mazur gave some of his students a series of tests that clearly 
showed they didn’t understand the underlying concepts of what he was teaching 
them — even the most basic. “My illusion of being a good teacher became 
unraveled,” Mazur admits.

His students were merely memorizing facts and regurgitating them and 
reproducing mathematical solutions that were not new. To Mazur, that’s not 
learning; for him, education is assimilating information and being able to use 
that knowledge to solve new problems. Stuff learned by rote is quickly 
forgotten; but understanding is something students never lose, he believes.

So Mazur – a world-renowned researcher of ultrafast optics, particularly 
short-pulse lasers – began investigating another topic that’s since become a 
second, major research area for him: science education. And he ultimately 
developed a novel, interactive teaching method for lecture-hall classes – Peer 
Instruction – that over the past decade has come into wide use around the world 
in a variety of disciplines.

Essentially, Mazur dispenses with lectures. Instead, he teaches by asking 
questions – after all, isn’t science an inquiry-based discipline? Ahead of 
classes, students are assigned to read a certain text or watch a video, but in 
the classroom itself, it’s Q&A time. And integral to the method is students 
teaching students, hence the title, Peer Instruction. Mazur asks a question 
about a concept, and gives students a minute or two to reflect, then another 
two to three minutes to discuss the question in groups of five or six and come 
up with a consensus answer.

Mazur stumbled upon the method when he had trouble getting a group of students 
to understand a simple (to him) principle, Newton’s Third Law. In frustration, 
he told them to discuss it among themselves. They did. And they came up with 
the right answer.

Recent research by his Mazur Group indicates that the method does help students 
grasp concepts that once eluded them. There’s also evidence it helps close the 
gender gap in grades, and improves the retention of freshman and junior 
students in science majors. It works, Mazur says, because those students who 
have deduced the correct answer have only just mastered that knowledge, so are 
more attuned to why their peers are still in the dark and hence can more 
intuitively guide them to enlightenment. The method’s been documented in his 
book, Peer Instruction: A User’s Manual, and in an award-winning DVD he 
coproduced, Interactive Teaching.

Mazur also pioneered the now popular use of wireless remotes, or “clickers,” in 
the classroom to help gauge student understanding of material. He stresses, 
however, that “it’s the pedagogy that matters, not the technology.” His 
earliest attempts at interactive teaching used flashcards in lieu of clickers.
The Netherlands-born Mazur, 56, who is also dean of applied physics, continues 
to look for better ways to teach science. Lecture demonstrations are perhaps 
the most enjoyable aspect of physics classes, but passive viewing of 
demonstrations doesn’t enhance student understanding, studies show. So his 
group is looking for ways to make demonstrations more effective, while keeping 
the fun intact.

He’s also critical of researchers who find teaching a chore. Mazur finds it 
“shocking” that academia is so unsystematic in its approach to instruction. “I 
am a professor. I am supposed to be a teacher.”

* * * * * * *
NOTE: Anyone can SUBSCRIBE to the Tomorrows-Professor Mailing List by going to:
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/tomorrows-professor






--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==
tomorrows-professor mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/tomorrows-professor





--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 10.0.1204 / Virus Database: 1435/3593 - Release Date: 04/23/11

Reply via email to