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www.cirtl.net Session begins at 1PM ET/12PM CT/11AM MT/10AM PT. Please configure your audio by running the Audio Set Up Wizard: Tools>Audio>Audio Set Up Wizard. Flipped Classrooms: What Are They, and Why Should You Use Them? What do you know about flipping a class? Respond below by using the textbox tool (the 4 th icon down on the vertical toolbar to the left) Martha Dunkelberger Assistant Clinical Professor, Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Houston Today’s Speaker:
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www.cirtl.net Welcome To Today’s CIRTLCast! Learn more about CIRTL at www.cirtl.net www.cirtl.net EVENTS JOURNAL CLUB COURSES WORKSHOPS SUMMER INSTITUTES
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Flipped Classrooms: What Are They, and Why Should You Use Them? Martha Dunkelberger, Assistant Clinical Professor
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What can be learned from literature? What happens outside class What happens during class Instructor perceptions Student perceptions Outcomes Qualitatively measured Quantitatively measured
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What happens outside of class? Students prepare before class by engaging with material independently Instructors provide material asynchronously
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What happens in class? Students apply new knowledge to practical activities Traditional “lab” kinds of tasks Group work Case studies Homework corrections/revisions Instructor engages by Corrective feedback Guiding discussion, leading questions Think-Pair-Shares Formative Assessment Summative Assessment
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Preparation for outside of class Prepare and record lecture materials Identify and obtain externally produced lecture materials TED talks, Kahn Academy, ItunesU Document access for accountability Ensure access within your powers Communicate with students re: expectations and required platform familiarity
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Preparation for in class Specific objectives Planned activities to connect lecture to objectives Consider grouping vs individual work
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Instructor perceptions Discussion, participation in class increases Group interaction increases Time spent grading increases Time spent planning increases Mastery of content is harder to determine Technological challenges persist
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Student perceptions Freedom to learn on an individual schedule Always a double edged sword Access equity issues Not “getting what they paid for”
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Research findings -- Quantitative Very limited empirical evidence that flipping a class changes student learning outcomes Exam scores improved End of term grades improved In-class attendance improved Student satisfaction improved All findings from Likert-scale type questionnaires and free response O’Flaherty, et al. (2014)
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Research findings -- Qualitative Qualitative claims: Students improve in communication skills Students improve in team work skills Instructors increased encouragement Students don’t like it…. Findings reported from end-of-term course evaluations
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What can be learned from my experiences? Prepare for a learning curve Technology Interactions
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Practical considerations for external material Modality for delivery Audio, video, text, combinations Platform for delivery Accountability checks
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Practical considerations for in- class activities Focused activities that integrate the knowledge presented outside of class Group work Experiments, analysis, First years/later years Large classes/small classes
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My status quo 18 years teaching; 12 teaching a course in normal development of speech and language Students needed to learn to collect, code and analyze transcripts of child language Certainly wasn’t happening in traditional classroom
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My motivations Get the students to think about language scientifically Variables to count and analyze Get the students to appreciate the rigor of language analysis Train the students in a specific skill
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My processes Wrote an internal grant Course release to build the course Purchase computers and a cart to store them Re-organized my lectures to produce short (30 minute) videos Designed quizzes to be assigned “randomly” Flipped the class
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In class assignments Access recordings of a child speaking Transcribe the sample Code the sample Analyze the sample
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Outside class assignments Watch the videos Take the quizzes Read the text
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My experiences Semester 1 What worked Videos What didn’t Computers Quizzes In class assignments Semester 2 What worked In class assignments What didn’t Computers Videos (at first) Semester 3 What worked Videos In class assignments What didn’t Computers Semester 4 What worked Videos In class assignments Computers (ha)
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My experiences Semester 1 Learning curve Time suck Grades Semester 2 Learning curve bends Time suck lessens Grades Semester 3 Learning curve levels out Found time Grades Semester 4 Cruising Grades Course evals
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What can be learned from my experiences? Prepare to meet a learning curve Be flexible with expectations For yourself For students Digital natives….
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Is it worth it?
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References Gilboy, M.B., Heinrichs, S., & Pazzaglia, G., (2015) Enhancing student engagement using the flipped classroom. Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, 47(1) Kim, M.K., Kim, S.M, Khera, O., & Getman, J., (2012) The experience of three flipped classrooms in an urban university: An exploration of design principles. Internet and Higher Education, 22 O’Flaherty, J., Phillips, C., Karanicolas, S., Snelling, C., & Winning, T. (2015) The use of flipped classrooms in higher education: A scoping review. The Internet and Higher Education, 25
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www.cirtl.net February CIRTLCast Series: Learning in the Active STEM Classroom February 3: Using Calibrated Peer-Reviewed Writing in the STEM Classroom Featuring Chad Wayne, University of Houston February 10: Working with First-Year STEM Students Featuring Pamela Bowen Smith, Bloomsburg University February 17: Flipped Classrooms: What Are They, and Why Should You Use Them? Featuring Martha Dunkelberger, University of Houston February 24: Getting the STEM Classroom Right: Engaging Undergraduate Students with Experiential Learning Featuring Dmitri Litvinov, University of Houston
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