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Published bySimon Cameron Modified over 9 years ago
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Supported by the US Dept. of Education and The University of Alabama
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Flexible Adapts to instructor’s tastes, styles Adapts to students’ needs Only a structure
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Foundation Coalition (NSF: Engineering) Active Learning Technology in the classroom Teaming More technology in labs
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Schedule: 2hrs, 2 days a week; 1 hr recitation per week Short lectures Labs and activities for most of the 2-hr sessions 50-60 students per section Technology driven
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The University of Alabama Department of Physics and Astronomy Studio Physics Classroom
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The University of Alabama Department of Physics and Astronomy Students in Studio Physics Classroom doing optics experiment
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Take data electronically Analyze data numerically …But also do paper/pencil analysis
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Some lecture Problem-solving examples Clicker questions Exercises Simulations Labs once a week
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https://bama.ua.edu/~stjones/ph101.htm https://bama.ua.edu/~stjones/ph101.htm http://bama.ua.edu/~jharrell/PH105-F08/ http://bama.ua.edu/~jharrell/PH105-F08/ http://bama.ua.edu/~rschad/teaching/LABs/ http://bama.ua.edu/~rschad/teaching/LABs/ http://www.as.ua.edu/ph/courses/Studio.html http://www.as.ua.edu/ph/courses/Studio.html http://bama.ua.edu/~stjones/PH101- 105activities.htm http://bama.ua.edu/~stjones/PH101- 105activities.htm
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No Must pick and choose Cover main items well Students responsible for rest This is a 4-hour course!
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Students have preconceived ideas These are hard to dislodge People can hold conflicting concepts simultaneously Students must be confronted by a conflict in order to abandon a misconception More than once
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Consider a boat loaded with scrap iron in a swimming pool. If the iron is thrown overboard into the pool, will the water level at the edge of the pool A. rise, B. fall, or C. remain unchanged?
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Interactive engagement techniques outstrip “traditional” in conceptual learning (Hake,1997) Conceptual learning in mechanics often measured with Force Concept Inventory (Hestenes et al., 1992, 1995) Hake gain: g = (post – pre)/(100% - pre)
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Cummings et al. (1999): Interactive Lecture Demonstrations (Sokoloff and Thornton, 1997) and Cooperative Group Problem Solving (Heller et al., 1992) are effective in a studio context. Many of Hake’s examples of interactive engagement were lecture courses
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Hake (1998): Students won’t take seriously tasks they don’t get credit for. Students are not necessarily actively (or even inactively) engaged when we think they are.
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Quiz? Help with homework Exercises Simulations Structured problem-solving e.g. https://bama.ua.edu/~stjones/ph101.htmhttps://bama.ua.edu/~stjones/ph101.htm
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Active learning Considerable student/teacher interaction Integration of labs and lecture material Collaborative learning Effective use of technology
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