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A Learner Centered
Approach to Teaching
Terry Doyle
Professor Emeritus
Ferris State University
doylet@Ferris.edu
www.learnercenteredteaching.wordpress.com
Slides Available on My Website
• All slides will be posted on my website following
• the presentation.
• www.learnercenteredteaching.wordpress.com
Message to Students on Resisting Learner
Centered Teaching
• It takes a lot of courage to release the familiar and
seemingly secure, to embrace the new. But there is no
real security in what is no longer meaningful. There is
more security in the adventurous and exciting, for in
movement there is life, and in change there is power.
• Alan Cohen
Message to Faculty from Derek Bok, Former
President of Harvard University
• This quote comes from the recognition of the inconsistent behavior
of faculty with regard to the research on teaching.
• “ In fact, it is somewhat perplexing that we as researchers are
resistant to such change. We are well trained in how to approach
problems analytically, collect data, make interpretations, form
conclusions and then revise experimental hypotheses and protocols
accordingly. If we are experts at making evidence–based decisions in
our experimental laboratories, then what forces are at play that
impede us from adopting equally iterative and evidence-based
approaches to teaching in our classrooms .”
Learning Outcomes for Todays Workshop
• At the end of todays workshop faculty will have a thorough
understanding of how to teach using a learner centered process.
• At the end of todays workshop faculty will have multiple ways to use
lecture as an active learning tool.
• At the end of todays workshop faculty will have multiple ways to
engage students in active learning activities.
Learning Outcomes for Todays Workshop
• At the end of todays workshop faculty will have a better
understanding of why students resist a learner centered teaching
approach.
• At the end of todays workshop faculty will have a thorough
understanding of how to teach for long term recall.
Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching
• Although it may irritate the
teacher, one of the most
intelligent questions a student
can ask is, “Why do we have to
do this?” Students( and the rest
of us, for all that) are loathe to
expend cognitive energy
unnecessarily , so assessing the
importance of a task is a key
initial step in cognition.
• (Robert Sylwester, 2003)
Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching
• We have a professional
obligation to follow the research
findings on human learning and
that research clearly shows a
learner centered approach
optimizes our students
opportunities to learn.
Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching
• Brain research shows that
the one who does the work
does the learning so a
teacher’s job is to get
students to do as much of
the work as possible.
Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching
• Students learn more and
more deeply when they
are actively engaged in
the learning process.
Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching
• Long term memories are formed
when new learning is practiced
over an extended period
(distributer practice) of time so
assigning activities that cause
the students to continually use
new learning is a key to their
learning success.
Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching
• Learning something new takes
much longer than students think
it does.
• To have command over
knowledge or skills when you
need them takes a lot of time
and practice.
• (Sigman,2017)
Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching
• If we want students to
become responsible
professionals then we
need to give them
greater responsibility for
their own learning.
Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching
• It is in our human nature to
seek control over our lives
so is this true in learning.
(Zull,2008)
• Students need to have some
say and control over the
learning process.
Teaching Practices Matter
• There is a vast body of research
that points to the fact that the
pedagogical choices teachers
make, the way they teach makes
a great deal of difference in
terms of how much students
learn, how long they remember
what they learn and how well
they can transfer their learning
to new settings.
(Tagg, 2018)
Evidence that Teaching Practices Matter
• In a meta analysis of 800 meta
analyses ( 50,000 studies) of
classroom learning researcher
James Hattie found that:
• “ the biggest effect on students
learning occurs when teachers
become learners of their own
teaching and students becomes
their own teachers.”
Definition of Learner Centered Teaching
• 1. To teach in harmony with how
the human brain learns.
• 2. Given the context of your
teaching situation ( time of day,
size of class, online, lab etc.) do
the teaching actions you take
optimize the opportunities for
your students to learn.
Key Questions We Need to Ask Ourselves
• What would make us happy that
our students still knew and could
use from the content and skills of
the course one year after we had
them in class?
• What can students learn on their
own?
• What is the best use of our time
with the students?
Learner Centered Teaching
“Many people who had
difficulty in school might
have prospered if the new
ideas about effective
instructional practices had
been available.
(Bransford et. al. p.5 How People Learn, 2000)
Learner Centered Teaching
“Furthermore, given new
instructional practices, even
those who did well in traditional
educational environments might
have developed skills,
knowledge, and attitudes that
would have significantly
enhanced their achievements.”
(Bransford et. al. p.5 How People Learn, 2000)
Teaching for Long Term Recall
• “Teaching in the
absence of learning is
just talking” (Thomas
Angelo)
Teaching for Long Term Recall
• One of the most powerful ways
to help students improve recall is
to post lectures online.
• Having access to review content
at a pace that works for them
improves understanding and
memory.
Teaching for Long Term Recall
• The use of tests and quizzes are
one of the very best ways to
promote long term learning.
• Especially the use of practice
tests where students are asked to
retrieve information from
memory rather than choosing an
answer from a list of choices.
Teaching for Long Term Recall
• Deciding to develop a practice
test bank will be one of the best
investments of your time to
improve students’ learning even
if it takes a year or two to
develop.
Give Cumulative Exams
• If you use exams then one great
way to promote long term
learning is to make them
cumulative.
• Continually asking students to
show they understand the most
important parts of the course by
retesting forces students into
regular review which leads to
long term recall.
Teaching for Long Term Recall
Getting and keeping students
attention.
We only learn what we pay
attention to.
Use of emotion is key.
Keys to Memory Formation
• The more elaborately students
encode new information at the
moment of learning the stronger
the memory
• Make it detailed, multifaceted
and emotional.
• (Squire and Kandel, 2000)
Keys to Memory Formation
• The same neural pathways used
to process new learning are the
same ones used to store it.
• So the initial moments of
learning are crucial to helping
students to recall what they
learned.
(Squire and Kandel, 2000)
Keys to Memory Formation
• The quality of our initial encoding
of new learning is the greatest
predictor of later learning
success.
(Squire and Kandel, 2000)
Teaching for Long Term Recall
Checking prior knowledge and
filling in missing knowledge when
ever possible.
The human brain seeks to connect
new learning to prior learning—the
more prior learning the easier new
learning becomes.
Teaching for Long Term Recall
Spaced Learning
New research confirms that the
brain needs downtime to process
new information.
Repeating the same information
after a period of time ( minutes,
days, a week or month) strengthens
memory for the information.
Teaching for Long Term Recall
Wanting to Remember
The human brain only seeks to make
memories for information that we
want to remember.
As we sleep important new learning is
moved from the hippocampus to the
prefrontal cortex where it can, if
practiced, become a memory.
Everything else is discarded.
Teaching for Long Term Recall
Distributed Practice
The best way to insure that students
are able to recall new learning is have
them practice it over time.
Studies suggest every other day is a
good practice schedule.
Each time the new learning is
practiced(recalled from memory) it get
stronger and faster.
Teaching for Long Term Recall
Elaboration of New Learning
The more ways in which new learning
is presented, used and studied the
greater likelihood of understanding
and recall.
Each elaboration creates its own
pathway in the brain both for
connecting to previously learned
material and for recall.
Examples of Elaboration
• Annotation of text
• Writing summary
• Drawing a cognitive map
• Discussing with others
• Using Mnemonic device
• Singing it
• Watching a video
Repetition and Recall
• How many of you know
the lyrics to songs that
YOU DO NOT WANT TO
KNOW THE LYRICS TO?
The Power of Repetition
• 1. Never tried to learn it.
• 2. Never practiced or studied it.
• 3. Took no tests on it.
• 4. Was not important to
remember it.
• KNOW IT PERFECTLY
Why Students Resist
Learner Centered Teaching
• Old Habits Die Hard
• Many students have spent 12-16
years in a fairly authoritative and
teacher centered educational
system if they went to school in the
U.S. ( even more so in many foreign
countries).
• As a result, they may still see
teachers as the dispensers of
information and themselves as the
receivers of that information.
Why Students Resist
Learner Centered Teaching
• Many of our students have been
highly successful in pervious
schooling experiences and see
no reason to change behaviors
that have work so well.
Why Students Resist
Learner Centered Teaching
• Learner Centered Teaching does
not fit the roles of what the
students think school should be
like.
• The teacher’s actions do not fit
the patterns of what students
believe teachers should be
doing.
Why Students Resist
Learner Centered Teaching
• Students do not think they are
getting their money’s worth
• Their belief that “I am paying
your salary”
Why Students Resist
Learner Centered Teaching
• Learning is not the top reason
students chose to go to college.
• Many students see no other
path to successful
employment—if their was they
would not have chosen college.
• They are sick to death of school.
• (Lemnson, 1999)
Why Students Resist
Learner Centered Teaching
• Many students have learned to
be “ minimalist learners.”
• They only exert enough effort to
get the grade they desire.
• Students also often see putting
out a lot of effort as a sign of
not being smart.
Why Students Resist
Learner Centered Teaching
• Students see teachers as
abdicating their
responsibilities when
they make the students
do most of the work.
Why Students Resist
Learner Centered Teaching
• LCT requires students to
take on a great
responsibility for their
learning success
including making more
choices about heir
learning and students
often are not happy
about this new role.
Why Students Resist
Learner Centered Teaching
• Students may not see that one
very important purposes of
college is to prepare them to be
life long learners capable of
learning on their own and able
to keep up their professional
readiness so they can remain
employed.
Why Students Resist
Learner Centered Teaching
Change is difficult for
everyone.
Learner Centered Teaching Tools
• One key to implementing a
successful LCT practice is to GO
SLOW.
• With each new tool you
implement explain why you are
doing so and how it will enhance
students’ learning.
Lecture as an Active Learning Tool
• Post lectures online so students
can review content as often as
needed.
• Research studies show 80% of
students find this helpful.
• Students will spend more time
with the content and engage
with it more deeply if they can
listen/view the lecture at their
own pace.
Lecture as an Active Learning Tool
• Effective lectures allow
students to watch an expert
think through a problem or
explain a concept or theory.
Lecture as an Active Learning Tool
• Effective Lectures are an
efficient way to fill in
background knowledge
especially for novice
learners.
Lecture as an Active Learning Tool
• Effective lectures allow students
to see how a professional
organizes information showing
connections between previous
knowledge, or related concepts
and theories.
Six Step Approach to an Active
Learning Lecture
• Step one—give a brief 10 minute
lecture explaining the days
problem, issue, question or case.
• Step Two—have students work on
their own for 10 minutes trying to
solve the problem ETC.
• Step Three—students pair up for
10 minutes and continue to work
on the problem ETC.
Six Step Approach to Active Learning Lecture
• Step Four– students form groups of
4-5 and continue to work the
problem ETC.
• Step Five—students report their
progress and/or solution.
• Step Six—teacher answers any
questions or solves the remaining
part of the problem showing
students what they might have
done to be more successful.
Discussion Based Lecture
• Step One—students do assigned
reading or video viewing before
class.
• Step Two—lecture is designed to
stop at specific spots where a
question(s) is posed to the
students. Multiple students can
volunteer answers of be call on.
Discussion Based Lecture
• Step three—teacher clarifies
answer and then moves on to
the next topic and question. Any
number of questions can be
asked during the class.
• In this model students need to
be prepared for class and ready
to contribute to the learning.
Visually Enhanced Lecture
• Vision is the most powerful
human sense. Evolution made
certain of that.
• Images are the easies thing
there is for a human to
learn/remember. ( Zull, 2008)
Visually Enhanced Lecture
• Adding visual aides make a lecture
multisensory which enhances
understanding and potential for
recall.
• The use of images, maps, charts,
graphs, drawings, pictures,
simulations, animations, and video
all enhance the opportunity for
students to better understand and
recall the new material.
Interactive Lecture
• A short lecture is given for up to
20 minutes.
• Students are then ask to do any
of the following:
• 1. Compare notes
• 2. Write a summary
• 3. Discuss questions
• 4. Solve a problem
Interactive Lecture
• Teacher then follows up by
seeking insights from the
students—
• Example
• What was the most important
idea of todays lecture?
• What answers did you find to
the questions/problems?
• Share your summary.
Lecture Enhancements
• Pretest to check prior knowledge
or recent previous learning.
• Quick quiz—formal or informal.
Can be done with clickers or on
Kahoot! (students use their
phones to give answers)
Lecture Enhancements
Turn and Talk.
Students discuss with neighbor
what they already know about
todays topic and how it is
connected to previous learning.
Teacher reviews last lecture to
focus students on connections to
new material.
Active Learning Tools—Walking Discussion Groups
Natural selection developed a
human brain to solve problems of
survival in outdoor, unstable
environments while in almost
constant motion.
A brain in motion is a brain better
able to learn.
(Medina, 2008)
Active Learning Tools—Walking Discussion Groups
• A growing body of evidence
strongly suggests we think and
learn better when we walk or do
other forms of movement.
Rhodes, 2013
Active Learning Tools—Walking Discussion Groups
• Even mild movement, like
walking, sitting on balance balls
or working a stationary bike all
improve learning.
• Try walking discussion groups!
Ratey, 2013
Active Learning Tools—Social Media
• Use of social media.
• Twitter feed questions for
students to respond to.
• Twitter feed course
communications.
• Twitter between classmates on
course questions.
• Students post a twitter feed
question during class/after class.
Active Learning Tools—Wiki Site
• Use of wiki site for test review.
• Students can post questions,
problems, issues they think will be
on the test based on class
activities/lectures.
• Teacher can visit site to add
additional information or fix
incorrect information.
• No need to use class time for test
review
Active Learning Tools—Polling
• Use of Polling for student
feedback, checking
understanding and quizzing.
• Students use their phones or
clickers to respond.
• Internet tools—Poll everywhere
or Kahoot! Can be used.
Active Learning Tools—Think Pair Share
• Think Pair Share
• Students first reflect on their own
about a learning issue, problem, or
question.
• Students then pair up and share
their insights with a classmate.
• Students then share their findings
with the whole class.
Active Learning Tools—Example Table
• Example Table
• Students draw a line down the
middle of a piece of paper. On
one side the heading is BIG IDEA
on the other is EXAMPLE.
• Students list the big ideas from
todays class or the last 2-3
classes and then write an
example of how to apply, or
connect the ideas to the course
topic.
Example Table
BIG IDEA Example
Active Learning Tools—Reflective Journal
• Reflective Journal
• Having students keep a reflective
journal is an excellent way to
deepen understanding, promote
connections between ideas and
have students recognize uses
and applications of new
material.
Active Learning Tools—Reflective Journal
• A reflective journal
• Once a week activity
• Can be guided by the teacher
with a specific focus
Active Learning Tools—Reflective Journal
• OR students independently
reflect on how well they are
learning, if they are keeping up
and what concerns they have
about their course work.
• The journal can be a form of
self-assessment.
Active Learning Tools—Reflective Journals
• The journal can be private just
for the students own reflection
or entries can be posted online
so the teacher can follow the
general well-being of the class.
• The journals are usually not
graded.
Active Learning Tools—Video Homework
• Video Homework
• Instead of having students write
answers to questions or
problems have them make a
video in which they explain the
answers and explain their
thinking that went into the
answer.
• These can be easily posted for
the teacher to review and grade.
Active Learning Tools—Video Homework
• The advantages:
• Video homework takes less time
to grade
• Video homework can reveal
more insights into the students
thinking processes.
• Students prefer it to written
homework.
Active Learning Tools—News Reporters
• News Reporters
• Each class period 2-3 students
are assigned to make a report on
the most important ideas shared
that day and their application to
the topic of the course.
• The 5 minute report is given at
the beginning of the next class
period as a review for all the
student.
Active Learning Tools—Flashcards
• Flashcards
• The most powerful form of
memory development is when
information is retrieved from
memory over an extended
period of time.( Distributed
Practice)
• Each time the memory is
retrieved it is strengthened and
future retrieval becomes faster.
Active Learning Tools—Flashcards
• Having students make flashcards
in which a definition, formula,
concept, theory ETC is on one
side and the explanation on the
other is an excellent ways to
promote long term recall.
Active Learning Tools—Flashcards
• The cards can be used outside of
class as individual study tools.
• Or during class for students to
quiz each other as a way to
practice course material.
• Flashcards are a convenient way
to study anywhere and promote
powerful memory development.
Active Learning Tools—Using Your Own
Words
• Put New Learning into Your Own
Words
• One of the most powerful ways
to check students’ learning and
for students to be able to self –
assess their own learning is to
ask students to put new learning
into their own words.
Active Learning Tools—Using Your Own
Words
• For students to effectively
translate what they have learned
into their own words requires
them to have a full
understanding on the new
learning.
• Asking for translation is an
excellent way to develop
metacognitive awareness.
Own Words Equals Better Learning
• Dunlosky and his colleagues
investigated ten different
learning strategies and one
consistent finding was that
anything that required learners
to put things into their own
words resulted in better learning
(Dunlosky, et al., 2013)
Teaching in Harmony with
the Brain
Our Brains Seek Patterns
• The brain is a pattern seeking
device. It seeks to connect new
information to existing patterns
of information.
( J. Ratey, 2001)
Patterns in Learning
• When we don’t recognize the
patterns we can get lost,
stressed, anxious or fearful.
Examples
• Reading your first research
journal.
• Traveling to a foreign country for
the first time.
Which of the following
slides is easier to
remember and WHY?
SLIDE ONE
4915802979
Slide Two
(491) 580-2979
What is the pattern in the next
slide.
Raise your hand when you find it.
Slide One
MTVNRAFBINBCUSA
Slide Two
MTV NRA NBC FBI USA
Teaching Students to Cluster Information is a Key
Use Of Patterning
Clustering is a type of patterning
used to organize related
information into groups.
Information that is categorized
becomes easier to remember and
recall.
Organize These Words to Make
Them Easy to Recall
Clustering might help
olives, tomatoes, carrots, chicken, lettuce,
ham, grapes, beef, strawberries, spinach,
pork, plums, mangos, potatoes, onions, fish,
duck, broccoli, cheese, cherries, turkey.
Using Clustering to Make
Learning Easier
• Alphabetical—This is a familiar pattern but it doesn’t help very
much.
• Beef, carrots, cheese, cherries, etc.
A More Meaningful Clustering
• Lunch and Dinner—categorizing the food by familiar areas like lunch and dinner
gives it more meaning and makes it much easier to recall.
• Lunch -- A salad including lettuce, cheese, tomatoes, olives, carrots, spinach,
broccoli, onions, turkey and ham.
• Dinner-- A fruit salad with plums, strawberries, mangos, grapes and cherries.
• Choices of duck, chicken, beef, fish or pork with potatoes.
Patterns in Reading Textbooks
In college textbooks 90 % of the
time the first sentence of a
paragraph is the Main Idea.
Main Ideas are almost always
followed by significant details—
details clarify or support MI’s.
Examples make up ½ of all textbook
material.
Common Patterns for Learning
Similarity and Difference
Cause and Effect
Comparison and Contrast
In students’ own words
Prior Knowledge and Pattern Recognition
• Expectations that certain
patterns will exist can
cause students (and
professionals) to fail to
see the actual patterns
that exist.
• Example:
• Misdiagnosis of patients
Discussion of Patterns in Your Content Material
• What are the common patterns
that exist in the content material
you teach?
• How do you teach these patterns
to your students?
Learning and Memory are Enhanced when Multiple
Senses are Engaged
• Each sensory pathway creates its
own memory pathways.
• The more senses used in learning
the more chances for
understanding and recall.
Teaching about the Sugar in a 20OZ Coke
Unisensory
• Read about the amount of sugar
in a Coke
• Listen to a brief lecture on the
sugar in Coke
• Multisensory
• Demonstrate the amount of
sugar in Coke
Teach in a Multisensory Way
• By using a multisensory
approach to instruction you
increase the chances of
making connections to
students’ background
knowledge/memoriesthus
optimizing leaning
opportunities.
Examples of Multisensory Learning
1. Annotation when reading
2. Cognitive mapping
3. Using a smell as a memory cue
4. Drawing a
picture/image/diagram
5. Listening while reading the same
text (supportive reading)
6. Taking notes
7. Visualizing while listening
Active Learning Using Groups
• Group work has been found to be
good for students and good for
teachers.
• Employers want college graduates
to have developed teamwork skills.
• Additionally, students who
participate in collaborative learning
get better grades and are more
satisfied with their education.
Keys to Effective Group Works
Students with a great deal of
background knowledge, social
maturity and
dedication/discipline find group
work more beneficial.
Group tasks that are specific,
with clear instructions and clear
roles for the group members
are the most successful groups.
Active Learning Using Groups
• https://cft.vanderbilt.edu/guides-
sub-pages/setting-up-and-
facilitating-group-work-using-
cooperative-learning-groups-
effectively/
• https://uncw.edu/jet/articles/Vol
11_2/Burke.pdf
Learner’s Mindset and Learning Success
• Dr. Carol Dweck spent 30 years
developing the theory of
mindset.
• A mindset is belief a person has
about their intelligence and
abilities.
Growth or Fixed
• Dweck’s work found that only
two belief systems developed in
learners.
• In each learning situation
learners either saw their
intelligence as fixed at birth—
hence a Fixed Mindset.
These learners see people as
being born either smart
average or below average and
that is just the way it is.
Growth Mindset
OR
• Learners see intelligence as
malleable and changeable and
that a person never knows how
smart they might become.
• You get smarter your whole life.
Students’ Mindsets
• Our students’ mindsets begin in
middle school or even before.
• Correlated with the time when
students, for the first time, are
confronted with more difficult
academic tasks.
Students’ Mindsets
• A mindset is situation specific.
Fixed in one area---- growth in
another.
Growth Mindset
In a growth mindset students
believe their intelligence and
abilities can be enhanced
through hard work, practice
and new skills or strategies
They see failure as a result of
a lack of effort or a poor
strategy (not intelligence).
Failure is something to learn
from.
Fixed Mindset
In a fixed mindset
students see their
intelligence reflected in
their performance.
(Dweck, 2006).
The famous—”I’m not good at
math.”
Fixed Mindset
Fixed mindsets falsely believe
they either shouldn’t need to
work hard to do well (because
smart kids don’t have to)
or
Putting in the effort won’t make
any difference in the outcome.
Growth Mindset
Students are willing to take
learning risks and understand
that through practice and effort
their abilities can improve.
Mistaking Fixed
Mindset for
Laziness
• It is easy to mistake a
fixed mindset for the
student not caring or
being lazy.
• In fact, it is helpful to
look for these behaviors
as a way to identify a
student with a fixed
mindset.
Bibliography
• REFERENCES
• http://www.brainadvance.org/ Allen, Corinne (Water and Brain health,
• Anderson, L. W., & Krathwohl, D. R. (Eds.). (2001). A taxonomy for learning, teaching and assessing: A revision of Bloom's taxonomy of educational objectives (Complete ed.). New York,
New York: Longman.
• Andrews, J. D. (1980). The verbal structure of teacher questions: Its impact on class discussion. POD Quarterly, 2, 130-163.
• Arnsten, A. F. T., Paspalas, C. D., Gamo, N. J., Yang, Y., & Wang, M. (2010). Dynamic network connectivity: A new form of neuroplasticity. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 4, 365-75.
• Aronson, J. (2007). In ‘The secret to raising smart kids’ by Carol Dweck. Scientific American. 29 Jul. Retrieved November 5, 2010 from http://homeworkhelpblog.com/the-secret-to-
raising-smartkids/
• Arum, R., & Roksa, J. (2011). Academically adrift: Limited learning on college campuses. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
• Atkins, D. (2010). Response to the article ‘Fixed mindset vs. growth mindset: Which one are you?’ by Michael Graham Richard. Retrieved May 5, 2010 from
http://michaelgr.com/2007/04/15/fixed-mindset-vs-growth-mindset-which-one-are-you/
• Banaszynski, J. (2000). Teaching the American revolution: Scaffolding to success. Education World: The Educator’s Best Friend. Retrieved November 1, 2010 from
http://www.educationworld.com/a_curr/curr218.shtml
• Bandura, A. (1997). Self-efficacy: The exercise of control. New York, New York: W.H. Freeman.
• Baram, T. Z., Chen, Y., Dubé, C. M., & Rice, C. J. (2008). Rapid loss of dendritic spines after stress involves derangement of spine dynamics by corticotropin-releasing hormone.
Journal of Neuroscience, 28, 2903-11.
• Barrett, N. F. Cognitive styles and strategies. Unpublished. Retrieved January 22, 2011 from http://barrett-evaluations.com/_pdfs/cogstrategies.pdf
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Teaching for Long Term Learning

  • 1. A Learner Centered Approach to Teaching Terry Doyle Professor Emeritus Ferris State University doylet@Ferris.edu www.learnercenteredteaching.wordpress.com
  • 2. Slides Available on My Website • All slides will be posted on my website following • the presentation. • www.learnercenteredteaching.wordpress.com
  • 3. Message to Students on Resisting Learner Centered Teaching • It takes a lot of courage to release the familiar and seemingly secure, to embrace the new. But there is no real security in what is no longer meaningful. There is more security in the adventurous and exciting, for in movement there is life, and in change there is power. • Alan Cohen
  • 4. Message to Faculty from Derek Bok, Former President of Harvard University • This quote comes from the recognition of the inconsistent behavior of faculty with regard to the research on teaching. • “ In fact, it is somewhat perplexing that we as researchers are resistant to such change. We are well trained in how to approach problems analytically, collect data, make interpretations, form conclusions and then revise experimental hypotheses and protocols accordingly. If we are experts at making evidence–based decisions in our experimental laboratories, then what forces are at play that impede us from adopting equally iterative and evidence-based approaches to teaching in our classrooms .”
  • 5. Learning Outcomes for Todays Workshop • At the end of todays workshop faculty will have a thorough understanding of how to teach using a learner centered process. • At the end of todays workshop faculty will have multiple ways to use lecture as an active learning tool. • At the end of todays workshop faculty will have multiple ways to engage students in active learning activities.
  • 6. Learning Outcomes for Todays Workshop • At the end of todays workshop faculty will have a better understanding of why students resist a learner centered teaching approach. • At the end of todays workshop faculty will have a thorough understanding of how to teach for long term recall.
  • 7. Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching • Although it may irritate the teacher, one of the most intelligent questions a student can ask is, “Why do we have to do this?” Students( and the rest of us, for all that) are loathe to expend cognitive energy unnecessarily , so assessing the importance of a task is a key initial step in cognition. • (Robert Sylwester, 2003)
  • 8. Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching • We have a professional obligation to follow the research findings on human learning and that research clearly shows a learner centered approach optimizes our students opportunities to learn.
  • 9. Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching • Brain research shows that the one who does the work does the learning so a teacher’s job is to get students to do as much of the work as possible.
  • 10. Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching • Students learn more and more deeply when they are actively engaged in the learning process.
  • 11. Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching • Long term memories are formed when new learning is practiced over an extended period (distributer practice) of time so assigning activities that cause the students to continually use new learning is a key to their learning success.
  • 12. Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching • Learning something new takes much longer than students think it does. • To have command over knowledge or skills when you need them takes a lot of time and practice. • (Sigman,2017)
  • 13. Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching • If we want students to become responsible professionals then we need to give them greater responsibility for their own learning.
  • 14. Rationales for Learner Centered Teaching • It is in our human nature to seek control over our lives so is this true in learning. (Zull,2008) • Students need to have some say and control over the learning process.
  • 15. Teaching Practices Matter • There is a vast body of research that points to the fact that the pedagogical choices teachers make, the way they teach makes a great deal of difference in terms of how much students learn, how long they remember what they learn and how well they can transfer their learning to new settings. (Tagg, 2018)
  • 16. Evidence that Teaching Practices Matter • In a meta analysis of 800 meta analyses ( 50,000 studies) of classroom learning researcher James Hattie found that: • “ the biggest effect on students learning occurs when teachers become learners of their own teaching and students becomes their own teachers.”
  • 17. Definition of Learner Centered Teaching • 1. To teach in harmony with how the human brain learns. • 2. Given the context of your teaching situation ( time of day, size of class, online, lab etc.) do the teaching actions you take optimize the opportunities for your students to learn.
  • 18. Key Questions We Need to Ask Ourselves • What would make us happy that our students still knew and could use from the content and skills of the course one year after we had them in class? • What can students learn on their own? • What is the best use of our time with the students?
  • 19. Learner Centered Teaching “Many people who had difficulty in school might have prospered if the new ideas about effective instructional practices had been available. (Bransford et. al. p.5 How People Learn, 2000)
  • 20. Learner Centered Teaching “Furthermore, given new instructional practices, even those who did well in traditional educational environments might have developed skills, knowledge, and attitudes that would have significantly enhanced their achievements.” (Bransford et. al. p.5 How People Learn, 2000)
  • 21. Teaching for Long Term Recall • “Teaching in the absence of learning is just talking” (Thomas Angelo)
  • 22. Teaching for Long Term Recall • One of the most powerful ways to help students improve recall is to post lectures online. • Having access to review content at a pace that works for them improves understanding and memory.
  • 23. Teaching for Long Term Recall • The use of tests and quizzes are one of the very best ways to promote long term learning. • Especially the use of practice tests where students are asked to retrieve information from memory rather than choosing an answer from a list of choices.
  • 24. Teaching for Long Term Recall • Deciding to develop a practice test bank will be one of the best investments of your time to improve students’ learning even if it takes a year or two to develop.
  • 25. Give Cumulative Exams • If you use exams then one great way to promote long term learning is to make them cumulative. • Continually asking students to show they understand the most important parts of the course by retesting forces students into regular review which leads to long term recall.
  • 26. Teaching for Long Term Recall Getting and keeping students attention. We only learn what we pay attention to. Use of emotion is key.
  • 27. Keys to Memory Formation • The more elaborately students encode new information at the moment of learning the stronger the memory • Make it detailed, multifaceted and emotional. • (Squire and Kandel, 2000)
  • 28. Keys to Memory Formation • The same neural pathways used to process new learning are the same ones used to store it. • So the initial moments of learning are crucial to helping students to recall what they learned. (Squire and Kandel, 2000)
  • 29. Keys to Memory Formation • The quality of our initial encoding of new learning is the greatest predictor of later learning success. (Squire and Kandel, 2000)
  • 30. Teaching for Long Term Recall Checking prior knowledge and filling in missing knowledge when ever possible. The human brain seeks to connect new learning to prior learning—the more prior learning the easier new learning becomes.
  • 31. Teaching for Long Term Recall Spaced Learning New research confirms that the brain needs downtime to process new information. Repeating the same information after a period of time ( minutes, days, a week or month) strengthens memory for the information.
  • 32. Teaching for Long Term Recall Wanting to Remember The human brain only seeks to make memories for information that we want to remember. As we sleep important new learning is moved from the hippocampus to the prefrontal cortex where it can, if practiced, become a memory. Everything else is discarded.
  • 33. Teaching for Long Term Recall Distributed Practice The best way to insure that students are able to recall new learning is have them practice it over time. Studies suggest every other day is a good practice schedule. Each time the new learning is practiced(recalled from memory) it get stronger and faster.
  • 34. Teaching for Long Term Recall Elaboration of New Learning The more ways in which new learning is presented, used and studied the greater likelihood of understanding and recall. Each elaboration creates its own pathway in the brain both for connecting to previously learned material and for recall.
  • 35. Examples of Elaboration • Annotation of text • Writing summary • Drawing a cognitive map • Discussing with others • Using Mnemonic device • Singing it • Watching a video
  • 36. Repetition and Recall • How many of you know the lyrics to songs that YOU DO NOT WANT TO KNOW THE LYRICS TO?
  • 37. The Power of Repetition • 1. Never tried to learn it. • 2. Never practiced or studied it. • 3. Took no tests on it. • 4. Was not important to remember it. • KNOW IT PERFECTLY
  • 38. Why Students Resist Learner Centered Teaching • Old Habits Die Hard • Many students have spent 12-16 years in a fairly authoritative and teacher centered educational system if they went to school in the U.S. ( even more so in many foreign countries). • As a result, they may still see teachers as the dispensers of information and themselves as the receivers of that information.
  • 39. Why Students Resist Learner Centered Teaching • Many of our students have been highly successful in pervious schooling experiences and see no reason to change behaviors that have work so well.
  • 40. Why Students Resist Learner Centered Teaching • Learner Centered Teaching does not fit the roles of what the students think school should be like. • The teacher’s actions do not fit the patterns of what students believe teachers should be doing.
  • 41. Why Students Resist Learner Centered Teaching • Students do not think they are getting their money’s worth • Their belief that “I am paying your salary”
  • 42. Why Students Resist Learner Centered Teaching • Learning is not the top reason students chose to go to college. • Many students see no other path to successful employment—if their was they would not have chosen college. • They are sick to death of school. • (Lemnson, 1999)
  • 43. Why Students Resist Learner Centered Teaching • Many students have learned to be “ minimalist learners.” • They only exert enough effort to get the grade they desire. • Students also often see putting out a lot of effort as a sign of not being smart.
  • 44. Why Students Resist Learner Centered Teaching • Students see teachers as abdicating their responsibilities when they make the students do most of the work.
  • 45. Why Students Resist Learner Centered Teaching • LCT requires students to take on a great responsibility for their learning success including making more choices about heir learning and students often are not happy about this new role.
  • 46. Why Students Resist Learner Centered Teaching • Students may not see that one very important purposes of college is to prepare them to be life long learners capable of learning on their own and able to keep up their professional readiness so they can remain employed.
  • 47. Why Students Resist Learner Centered Teaching Change is difficult for everyone.
  • 48. Learner Centered Teaching Tools • One key to implementing a successful LCT practice is to GO SLOW. • With each new tool you implement explain why you are doing so and how it will enhance students’ learning.
  • 49. Lecture as an Active Learning Tool • Post lectures online so students can review content as often as needed. • Research studies show 80% of students find this helpful. • Students will spend more time with the content and engage with it more deeply if they can listen/view the lecture at their own pace.
  • 50. Lecture as an Active Learning Tool • Effective lectures allow students to watch an expert think through a problem or explain a concept or theory.
  • 51. Lecture as an Active Learning Tool • Effective Lectures are an efficient way to fill in background knowledge especially for novice learners.
  • 52. Lecture as an Active Learning Tool • Effective lectures allow students to see how a professional organizes information showing connections between previous knowledge, or related concepts and theories.
  • 53. Six Step Approach to an Active Learning Lecture • Step one—give a brief 10 minute lecture explaining the days problem, issue, question or case. • Step Two—have students work on their own for 10 minutes trying to solve the problem ETC. • Step Three—students pair up for 10 minutes and continue to work on the problem ETC.
  • 54. Six Step Approach to Active Learning Lecture • Step Four– students form groups of 4-5 and continue to work the problem ETC. • Step Five—students report their progress and/or solution. • Step Six—teacher answers any questions or solves the remaining part of the problem showing students what they might have done to be more successful.
  • 55. Discussion Based Lecture • Step One—students do assigned reading or video viewing before class. • Step Two—lecture is designed to stop at specific spots where a question(s) is posed to the students. Multiple students can volunteer answers of be call on.
  • 56. Discussion Based Lecture • Step three—teacher clarifies answer and then moves on to the next topic and question. Any number of questions can be asked during the class. • In this model students need to be prepared for class and ready to contribute to the learning.
  • 57. Visually Enhanced Lecture • Vision is the most powerful human sense. Evolution made certain of that. • Images are the easies thing there is for a human to learn/remember. ( Zull, 2008)
  • 58. Visually Enhanced Lecture • Adding visual aides make a lecture multisensory which enhances understanding and potential for recall. • The use of images, maps, charts, graphs, drawings, pictures, simulations, animations, and video all enhance the opportunity for students to better understand and recall the new material.
  • 59. Interactive Lecture • A short lecture is given for up to 20 minutes. • Students are then ask to do any of the following: • 1. Compare notes • 2. Write a summary • 3. Discuss questions • 4. Solve a problem
  • 60. Interactive Lecture • Teacher then follows up by seeking insights from the students— • Example • What was the most important idea of todays lecture? • What answers did you find to the questions/problems? • Share your summary.
  • 61. Lecture Enhancements • Pretest to check prior knowledge or recent previous learning. • Quick quiz—formal or informal. Can be done with clickers or on Kahoot! (students use their phones to give answers)
  • 62. Lecture Enhancements Turn and Talk. Students discuss with neighbor what they already know about todays topic and how it is connected to previous learning. Teacher reviews last lecture to focus students on connections to new material.
  • 63. Active Learning Tools—Walking Discussion Groups Natural selection developed a human brain to solve problems of survival in outdoor, unstable environments while in almost constant motion. A brain in motion is a brain better able to learn. (Medina, 2008)
  • 64. Active Learning Tools—Walking Discussion Groups • A growing body of evidence strongly suggests we think and learn better when we walk or do other forms of movement. Rhodes, 2013
  • 65. Active Learning Tools—Walking Discussion Groups • Even mild movement, like walking, sitting on balance balls or working a stationary bike all improve learning. • Try walking discussion groups! Ratey, 2013
  • 66. Active Learning Tools—Social Media • Use of social media. • Twitter feed questions for students to respond to. • Twitter feed course communications. • Twitter between classmates on course questions. • Students post a twitter feed question during class/after class.
  • 67. Active Learning Tools—Wiki Site • Use of wiki site for test review. • Students can post questions, problems, issues they think will be on the test based on class activities/lectures. • Teacher can visit site to add additional information or fix incorrect information. • No need to use class time for test review
  • 68. Active Learning Tools—Polling • Use of Polling for student feedback, checking understanding and quizzing. • Students use their phones or clickers to respond. • Internet tools—Poll everywhere or Kahoot! Can be used.
  • 69. Active Learning Tools—Think Pair Share • Think Pair Share • Students first reflect on their own about a learning issue, problem, or question. • Students then pair up and share their insights with a classmate. • Students then share their findings with the whole class.
  • 70. Active Learning Tools—Example Table • Example Table • Students draw a line down the middle of a piece of paper. On one side the heading is BIG IDEA on the other is EXAMPLE. • Students list the big ideas from todays class or the last 2-3 classes and then write an example of how to apply, or connect the ideas to the course topic. Example Table BIG IDEA Example
  • 71. Active Learning Tools—Reflective Journal • Reflective Journal • Having students keep a reflective journal is an excellent way to deepen understanding, promote connections between ideas and have students recognize uses and applications of new material.
  • 72. Active Learning Tools—Reflective Journal • A reflective journal • Once a week activity • Can be guided by the teacher with a specific focus
  • 73. Active Learning Tools—Reflective Journal • OR students independently reflect on how well they are learning, if they are keeping up and what concerns they have about their course work. • The journal can be a form of self-assessment.
  • 74. Active Learning Tools—Reflective Journals • The journal can be private just for the students own reflection or entries can be posted online so the teacher can follow the general well-being of the class. • The journals are usually not graded.
  • 75. Active Learning Tools—Video Homework • Video Homework • Instead of having students write answers to questions or problems have them make a video in which they explain the answers and explain their thinking that went into the answer. • These can be easily posted for the teacher to review and grade.
  • 76. Active Learning Tools—Video Homework • The advantages: • Video homework takes less time to grade • Video homework can reveal more insights into the students thinking processes. • Students prefer it to written homework.
  • 77. Active Learning Tools—News Reporters • News Reporters • Each class period 2-3 students are assigned to make a report on the most important ideas shared that day and their application to the topic of the course. • The 5 minute report is given at the beginning of the next class period as a review for all the student.
  • 78. Active Learning Tools—Flashcards • Flashcards • The most powerful form of memory development is when information is retrieved from memory over an extended period of time.( Distributed Practice) • Each time the memory is retrieved it is strengthened and future retrieval becomes faster.
  • 79. Active Learning Tools—Flashcards • Having students make flashcards in which a definition, formula, concept, theory ETC is on one side and the explanation on the other is an excellent ways to promote long term recall.
  • 80. Active Learning Tools—Flashcards • The cards can be used outside of class as individual study tools. • Or during class for students to quiz each other as a way to practice course material. • Flashcards are a convenient way to study anywhere and promote powerful memory development.
  • 81. Active Learning Tools—Using Your Own Words • Put New Learning into Your Own Words • One of the most powerful ways to check students’ learning and for students to be able to self – assess their own learning is to ask students to put new learning into their own words.
  • 82. Active Learning Tools—Using Your Own Words • For students to effectively translate what they have learned into their own words requires them to have a full understanding on the new learning. • Asking for translation is an excellent way to develop metacognitive awareness.
  • 83. Own Words Equals Better Learning • Dunlosky and his colleagues investigated ten different learning strategies and one consistent finding was that anything that required learners to put things into their own words resulted in better learning (Dunlosky, et al., 2013)
  • 84. Teaching in Harmony with the Brain
  • 85. Our Brains Seek Patterns • The brain is a pattern seeking device. It seeks to connect new information to existing patterns of information. ( J. Ratey, 2001)
  • 86. Patterns in Learning • When we don’t recognize the patterns we can get lost, stressed, anxious or fearful. Examples • Reading your first research journal. • Traveling to a foreign country for the first time.
  • 87. Which of the following slides is easier to remember and WHY?
  • 90. What is the pattern in the next slide. Raise your hand when you find it.
  • 92. Slide Two MTV NRA NBC FBI USA
  • 93. Teaching Students to Cluster Information is a Key Use Of Patterning Clustering is a type of patterning used to organize related information into groups. Information that is categorized becomes easier to remember and recall.
  • 94. Organize These Words to Make Them Easy to Recall Clustering might help olives, tomatoes, carrots, chicken, lettuce, ham, grapes, beef, strawberries, spinach, pork, plums, mangos, potatoes, onions, fish, duck, broccoli, cheese, cherries, turkey.
  • 95. Using Clustering to Make Learning Easier • Alphabetical—This is a familiar pattern but it doesn’t help very much. • Beef, carrots, cheese, cherries, etc.
  • 96. A More Meaningful Clustering • Lunch and Dinner—categorizing the food by familiar areas like lunch and dinner gives it more meaning and makes it much easier to recall. • Lunch -- A salad including lettuce, cheese, tomatoes, olives, carrots, spinach, broccoli, onions, turkey and ham. • Dinner-- A fruit salad with plums, strawberries, mangos, grapes and cherries. • Choices of duck, chicken, beef, fish or pork with potatoes.
  • 97. Patterns in Reading Textbooks In college textbooks 90 % of the time the first sentence of a paragraph is the Main Idea. Main Ideas are almost always followed by significant details— details clarify or support MI’s. Examples make up ½ of all textbook material.
  • 98. Common Patterns for Learning Similarity and Difference Cause and Effect Comparison and Contrast In students’ own words
  • 99. Prior Knowledge and Pattern Recognition • Expectations that certain patterns will exist can cause students (and professionals) to fail to see the actual patterns that exist. • Example: • Misdiagnosis of patients
  • 100. Discussion of Patterns in Your Content Material • What are the common patterns that exist in the content material you teach? • How do you teach these patterns to your students?
  • 101. Learning and Memory are Enhanced when Multiple Senses are Engaged • Each sensory pathway creates its own memory pathways. • The more senses used in learning the more chances for understanding and recall.
  • 102. Teaching about the Sugar in a 20OZ Coke Unisensory • Read about the amount of sugar in a Coke • Listen to a brief lecture on the sugar in Coke • Multisensory • Demonstrate the amount of sugar in Coke
  • 103. Teach in a Multisensory Way • By using a multisensory approach to instruction you increase the chances of making connections to students’ background knowledge/memoriesthus optimizing leaning opportunities.
  • 104. Examples of Multisensory Learning 1. Annotation when reading 2. Cognitive mapping 3. Using a smell as a memory cue 4. Drawing a picture/image/diagram 5. Listening while reading the same text (supportive reading) 6. Taking notes 7. Visualizing while listening
  • 105. Active Learning Using Groups • Group work has been found to be good for students and good for teachers. • Employers want college graduates to have developed teamwork skills. • Additionally, students who participate in collaborative learning get better grades and are more satisfied with their education.
  • 106. Keys to Effective Group Works Students with a great deal of background knowledge, social maturity and dedication/discipline find group work more beneficial. Group tasks that are specific, with clear instructions and clear roles for the group members are the most successful groups.
  • 107. Active Learning Using Groups • https://cft.vanderbilt.edu/guides- sub-pages/setting-up-and- facilitating-group-work-using- cooperative-learning-groups- effectively/ • https://uncw.edu/jet/articles/Vol 11_2/Burke.pdf
  • 108. Learner’s Mindset and Learning Success • Dr. Carol Dweck spent 30 years developing the theory of mindset. • A mindset is belief a person has about their intelligence and abilities.
  • 109. Growth or Fixed • Dweck’s work found that only two belief systems developed in learners. • In each learning situation learners either saw their intelligence as fixed at birth— hence a Fixed Mindset. These learners see people as being born either smart average or below average and that is just the way it is.
  • 110. Growth Mindset OR • Learners see intelligence as malleable and changeable and that a person never knows how smart they might become. • You get smarter your whole life.
  • 111. Students’ Mindsets • Our students’ mindsets begin in middle school or even before. • Correlated with the time when students, for the first time, are confronted with more difficult academic tasks.
  • 112. Students’ Mindsets • A mindset is situation specific. Fixed in one area---- growth in another.
  • 113. Growth Mindset In a growth mindset students believe their intelligence and abilities can be enhanced through hard work, practice and new skills or strategies They see failure as a result of a lack of effort or a poor strategy (not intelligence). Failure is something to learn from.
  • 114. Fixed Mindset In a fixed mindset students see their intelligence reflected in their performance. (Dweck, 2006). The famous—”I’m not good at math.”
  • 115. Fixed Mindset Fixed mindsets falsely believe they either shouldn’t need to work hard to do well (because smart kids don’t have to) or Putting in the effort won’t make any difference in the outcome.
  • 116. Growth Mindset Students are willing to take learning risks and understand that through practice and effort their abilities can improve.
  • 117. Mistaking Fixed Mindset for Laziness • It is easy to mistake a fixed mindset for the student not caring or being lazy. • In fact, it is helpful to look for these behaviors as a way to identify a student with a fixed mindset.
  • 118. Bibliography • REFERENCES • http://www.brainadvance.org/ Allen, Corinne (Water and Brain health, • Anderson, L. W., & Krathwohl, D. R. (Eds.). (2001). A taxonomy for learning, teaching and assessing: A revision of Bloom's taxonomy of educational objectives (Complete ed.). New York, New York: Longman. • Andrews, J. D. (1980). The verbal structure of teacher questions: Its impact on class discussion. POD Quarterly, 2, 130-163. • Arnsten, A. F. T., Paspalas, C. D., Gamo, N. J., Yang, Y., & Wang, M. (2010). Dynamic network connectivity: A new form of neuroplasticity. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 4, 365-75. • Aronson, J. (2007). In ‘The secret to raising smart kids’ by Carol Dweck. Scientific American. 29 Jul. Retrieved November 5, 2010 from http://homeworkhelpblog.com/the-secret-to- raising-smartkids/ • Arum, R., & Roksa, J. (2011). Academically adrift: Limited learning on college campuses. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press. • Atkins, D. (2010). Response to the article ‘Fixed mindset vs. growth mindset: Which one are you?’ by Michael Graham Richard. Retrieved May 5, 2010 from http://michaelgr.com/2007/04/15/fixed-mindset-vs-growth-mindset-which-one-are-you/ • Banaszynski, J. (2000). Teaching the American revolution: Scaffolding to success. Education World: The Educator’s Best Friend. Retrieved November 1, 2010 from http://www.educationworld.com/a_curr/curr218.shtml • Bandura, A. (1997). Self-efficacy: The exercise of control. New York, New York: W.H. Freeman. • Baram, T. Z., Chen, Y., Dubé, C. M., & Rice, C. J. (2008). Rapid loss of dendritic spines after stress involves derangement of spine dynamics by corticotropin-releasing hormone. Journal of Neuroscience, 28, 2903-11. • Barrett, N. F. Cognitive styles and strategies. Unpublished. Retrieved January 22, 2011 from http://barrett-evaluations.com/_pdfs/cogstrategies.pdf • Barton, J., Heilker, P., & Rutkowsk, D. (2008). Fostering effective classroom discussions. Retrieved February 12, 2011 from http://www.utoledo.edu/centers/ctl/teaching_resources/Fostering_Effective_Classroom_Discussions.html • Bibb, J. A., Mayford, M. R., Tsien, J. Z., & Alberini, C. M. (2010). Cognition enhancement strategies. The Journal of Neuroscience, 10 November, 30(45), 14987-14992. doi:10.1523/​JNEUROSCI.4419-1. • Birbili, M. (2006). Mapping knowledge: Concept maps in early childhood education. Early Childhood Research and Practice, 8(2). • Bjork, D. R. (1994). Memory and metamemory: Considerations in the training of human beings. Metacognition: Knowing about knowing, J. Metcalfe and A. Shimamura (Eds.). 185-205. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. • Bjork, D. (2001). How to succeed in college: Learn how to learn. APS Observer, 14(3), 9. • health: Key roles of growth factor cascades and inflammation. Trends in Neurosciences, 30(10), 489. • : Alliance. • Address: Learning in school and out. Educational Researcher, 16(9), 13-20.
  • 119. Bibliography • Bligh, D. A. (2000). What’s the use of lectures? San Francisco, California: Jossey-Bass. • Bloom, B. S., & Krathwohl, D. R. (1956). Taxonomy of educational objectives: The classification of educational goals, by a committee of college and university examiners. Handbook 1: Cognitive domain. New York, New York: Longmans. • Bohn, R., & Short, J. E. (2009). How much information? 2009 report on American consumers. Retrieved October 15, 2010 from http://hmi.ucsd.edu/pdf/HMI_2009_ConsumerReport_Dec9_2009.pdf • Bok, D. (2006). Our underachieving colleges: A candid look at how much students learn and why they should be learning more. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. • Bottge, B. A., Rueda, E., Serlin, R., Hung, Y. H., & Kwon, J. (2007). Shrinking achievement differences with anchored math problems: Challenges and possibilities. Journal of Special Education, 41, 31-49. • Brain seeks patterns where none exist. (2008). Scientific American. Retrieved November 13, 2010 from http://www.scientificamerican.com/podcast/episode.cfm?id=brain-seeks-patterns-where-none-exi- • Brainard, J., & Fuller, A. (2010). Graduation rates fall at one-third of 4-year colleges. Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved December 12, 2010 from http://chronicle.com/article/Graduation-Rates-Fall-at/125614/ • Bransford, J., National Research Council, Committee on Developments in the Science of Learning, National Research Council, & Committee on Learning Research and Educational Practice. (2000). How people learn: Brain, mind, experience, and school (Expanded ed.). Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. • Bransford, J. D., Brown, A. L., & Cocking, R. R. (ed.). (2000). How people learn: Brain, mind, experience, and school (Expanded ed.). Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press. • Brookfield, S. D., & Preskill, S. (2005). Discussion as a way of teaching: Tools and techniques for democratic classrooms (2nd ed.). 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W., & Gamson, Z. F. (1991). Applying the seven principles for good practice in undergraduate education. New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 47. San Francisco, California: Jossey Bass. • Collier, K. G. (1980). Peer-group learning in higher education: The development of higher-order skills. Studies in Higher Education, 5(1), 55-62. • Cooke, S. F., & Bliss, T.V. (2006). Plasticity in the human central nervous system. Brain, 129(7), 1659–73. doi:10.1093/brain/awl082. PMID 16672292. • Cooper, J., & Associates. (1990). Cooperative learning and college instruction. Long Beach, California: Institute for Teaching and Learning, California State University. • Cooperative Institutional Research Program. (1995). 1994 Nine year follow-up survey (of 1985 freshmen). Higher Education Research Institute at UCLA. Retrieved October 18, 2010 from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3211250 • Cotm, C., Carl, W., Berchtold, N., & Christie, L. A. (2007). Corrigendum: Exercise builds brain
  • 120. Bibliography • REFERENCES • http://www.brainadvance.org/ Allen, Corinne (Water and Brain health, • Anderson, L. W., & Krathwohl, D. R. (Eds.). (2001). A taxonomy for learning, teaching and assessing: A revision of Bloom's taxonomy of educational objectives (Complete ed.). New York, New York: Longman. • Andrews, J. D. (1980). The verbal structure of teacher questions: Its impact on class discussion. POD Quarterly, 2, 130-163. • Arnsten, A. F. T., Paspalas, C. D., Gamo, N. J., Yang, Y., & Wang, M. (2010). Dynamic network connectivity: A new form of neuroplasticity. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 4, 365-75. • Aronson, J. (2007). In ‘The secret to raising smart kids’ by Carol Dweck. Scientific American. 29 Jul. Retrieved November 5, 2010 from http://homeworkhelpblog.com/the-secret-to- raising-smartkids/ • Arum, R., & Roksa, J. (2011). Academically adrift: Limited learning on college campuses. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press. • Atkins, D. (2010). Response to the article ‘Fixed mindset vs. growth mindset: Which one are you?’ by Michael Graham Richard. Retrieved May 5, 2010 from http://michaelgr.com/2007/04/15/fixed-mindset-vs-growth-mindset-which-one-are-you/ • Banaszynski, J. (2000). Teaching the American revolution: Scaffolding to success. Education World: The Educator’s Best Friend. Retrieved November 1, 2010 from http://www.educationworld.com/a_curr/curr218.shtml • Bandura, A. (1997). Self-efficacy: The exercise of control. New York, New York: W.H. Freeman. • Baram, T. Z., Chen, Y., Dubé, C. M., & Rice, C. J. (2008). Rapid loss of dendritic spines after stress involves derangement of spine dynamics by corticotropin-releasing hormone. Journal of Neuroscience, 28, 2903-11. • Barrett, N. F. Cognitive styles and strategies. Unpublished. Retrieved January 22, 2011 from http://barrett-evaluations.com/_pdfs/cogstrategies.pdf • Barton, J., Heilker, P., & Rutkowsk, D. (2008). Fostering effective classroom discussions. Retrieved February 12, 2011 from http://www.utoledo.edu/centers/ctl/teaching_resources/Fostering_Effective_Classroom_Discussions.html • Bibb, J. A., Mayford, M. R., Tsien, J. Z., & Alberini, C. M. (2010). Cognition enhancement strategies. The Journal of Neuroscience, 10 November, 30(45), 14987-14992. doi:10.1523/​JNEUROSCI.4419-1. • Birbili, M. (2006). Mapping knowledge: Concept maps in early childhood education. Early Childhood Research and Practice, 8(2). • Bjork, D. R. (1994). Memory and metamemory: Considerations in the training of human beings. Metacognition: Knowing about knowing, J. Metcalfe and A. Shimamura (Eds.). 185-205. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. • Bjork, D. (2001). How to succeed in college: Learn how to learn. APS Observer, 14(3), 9. • health: Key roles of growth factor cascades and inflammation. Trends in Neurosciences, 30(10), 489. • : Alliance. • Address: Learning in school and out. Educational Researcher, 16(9), 13-20.
  • 121. Bibliography • Crisp, B. (2007). Is it worth the effort? How feedback influences students’ subsequent submission of assessable work. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 32(5), 571-581. • Cull, W. (2000). Untangling the benefits of multiple study opportunities and repeated testing for cued recall. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 14, 215-235. • Customer Service Training. McDonald’s developed by 3dsolve.com. Retrieved December 12, 2010 from http://www.3dsolve.com/ • Schacter, D. (2001). The seven sins of memory. Boston, Massachusetts: Houghton Mifflin. • Dale, E. (1969). Cone of experience, in educational media: Theory into practice. Wiman, R.V. (ed). Columbus, Ohio: Charles Merrill. • Damasio, A. R. (2001). Fundamental feelings. Nature, 413, 781. • Damasio, A. R. (1994). Descartes' error: Emotion, reason, and the human brain. New York, New York: Grosset/Putnam. • Davachi, L., & Bernhard, P. S., (2009). Mind the gap: Binding experiences across space and time in the human hippocampus. Neuron, 63(2), 267-276. doi:10.1016/j.neuron.2009.06.024. • Davachi. L., Tambini, A. & Ketz, N. (2010). Enhanced brain correlations during rest are related to memory for recent experiences. Neuron, 65(2), 280–290. • De Byl, P. (2009). Is there an augmented reality future for e-learning? Proceedings of the IADIS International Conference on e-Learning Algarve, Portugal 17-20 June. Retrieved March 12, 2011 from http://www.iadisportal.org/e-learning-2009-proceedings • De Groot, A. D. (1965). Thought and choice in chess. Amsterdam: Noord-Hollandsche Uitgeversmaatschappij. • Deheane, S. (2009). Reading in the brain. New York, New York: Penguin Publishing. • Devlin, K. (2002). In PBS literacy links program synopses, p.12. Retrieved February 12, 2011 from http://www.ketadultlearning.org/pdf/ged_synopses.pdf • Dewey, J. (1933). How we think: A restatement of the relation of reflective thinking to the educative process. Boston, Massachusetts: D.C. Heath. • Diefes-Dux, H., Follman, D., Imbrie, P.K., Zawojewski, J., Capobianco, B., & Hjalmarson, M. (2004). Model eliciting activities: An in-class approach to improving interest and persistence of women in engineering. Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition. American Society for Engineering. Retrieved October 29, 2010 from http://www.iwitts.com/html/022diefes-dux.pdf • Diekelmann, S., & Born, J. (2010). Slow-wave sleep takes the leading role in memory reorganization. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 11, 218. doi:10.1038/nrn2762-c2 • Dondlinger, M. J. (2007). About serious games. Journal of Applied Educational Technology, 4(1). Retrieved January 17, 2011 from http://www.abfirstresponse.co.uk/Aybee/serious%20games.html • Donovan, M. S., Bransford, J. D., & Pellegrino, J. W. (Eds.). (1999). How people learn: Bridging research and practice. Washington, DC: National Academy Press. • Doyle, T. (2008). Helping students learn in a learner centered environment: A guide to teaching in higher education. Sterling, Virginia: Stylus. • Duclukovic, N. M., & Wagner, A. D. (2006). Attending to remember and remembering to attend. Neuron, 49, 784-787. • Duncan, N. (2007). Feed-forward: Improving students’ use of tutor comments. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 32(3), 271-283. • Dux, P. E., Ivanoff, J., Asplund, C. L. O., & Marois, R. (2006). Isolation of a central bottleneck of information processing with time-resolved fMRI. Neuron, 52(6), 1109-1120. • Dweck, C. S. (2006). Mindset: The new psychology of success. New York, New York: Random House. • Dweck, C. S. (2007). Interview in Stanford News. Retrieved March 11, 2011 from http://news.stanford.edu/news/2007/february7/videos/179_flash.html • Dweck, C. S. (2009). ‘Mindset: Powerful insights’ from interview on the Positive Coaching Alliance website. Retrieved October 28, 2010 from http://www.positivecoach.org/carol-dweck.aspx • Ebbinghaus, H. (1885). Memory: A contribution to experimental psychology. New York, New York: Teachers College, Columbia University.
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Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Robert Sylwester is the author of the book A Celebration of Neurons
  2. From the book The Secret Life of the mind by Neuroscientist Mariano Sigman
  3. James Zull The art of changing the Brain
  4. http://blogs.onlineeducation.touro.edu/8-benefits-of-transcribing-online-video-lectures/ 8 Benefits of Transcribing Online Video Lectures by admin • January 13, 2014 • 
  5. http://psych.wustl.edu/memory/Roddy%20article%20PDF's/BC_Roediger%20et%20al%20(2011)_PLM.pdf Benefits of Testing and their Application to Educational Practice
  6. Memory: From Mind to Molecules . Edited by Larry R. Squire and Eric R. Kandel. Scientific American Library, New York, 1999. Pp xi+235, ISBN 0-7167-6037-1 …
  7. Castel, A. D., Logan, J. M., Haber, S., & Viehman, E. J. (2012). Metacognition and the spacing effect: the role of repetition, feedback, and instruction on judgments of learning for massed and spaced rehearsal. Metacognition and Learning. doi:10.1007/s11409-012-9090-3
  8. The research that supports the following slides on active lecturing comes from the 2017 publication Dynamic Lecturing Researched –Based Strategies to Enhance Lecture Effectiveness by Harrington and Zakrajsek.
  9. Justin Rhodes, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, responds:
  10. Ratey, J. (2013). Spark: The Revolutionary new science of exercise and the brain. New York, NY: Little Brown
  11. Why Won't You Change Your Mind? Knowledge of Operational Patterns Hinders Learning and Performance on Equations
  12. Group Work: How to Use Groups Effectively Alison Burke1 Southern Oregon University, Ashland, OR 97520 The Journal of Effective Teaching an online journal devoted to teaching excellence
  13. Cite this guide: Brame, C.J. and Biel, R. (2015). Setting up and facilitating group work: Using cooperative learning groups effectively. Retrieved [todaysdate] from http://cft.vanderbilt.edu/guides-sub-pages/setting-up-and-facilitating-group-work-using-cooperative-learning-groups-effectively/.
  14. Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci. 2006 Sep; 1(2): 75–86. doi:  10.1093/scan/nsl013 PMCID: PMC1838571 NIHMSID: NIHMS16001 Why do beliefs about intelligence influence learning success? A social cognitive neuroscience model Jennifer A. Mangels,1 Brady Butterfield,2 Justin Lamb,1 Catherine Good,3 and Carol S. Dweck4
  15. Dweck, C. (2006). Mindset The New Psychology of Success. New York, NY: Random House