| Bonwell,
Charles C., & Eison, James A. (1991). Active
Learning: Creating
Excitement In The Classroom. ASHE-ERIC Higher Education Report No. 1,
Washington, D.C.: The George Washington University, School of
Education and Human Development.
Paired
Pauses: stop for two minutes several times during the
lecture. Each time, students pair up with
someone next to them and discuss the lecture and
compare notes.
End
of Class Free Recall:
at the end of class, students are given three minutes
to write down everything they can recall from lecture.
Guided
Lecture: the preceding technique (End of Class Free
Recall) is followed by students forming groups and
reconstructing the lecture.
Feedback
Lectures:
after each 20 minutes of lecture, students pair off
and respond to a discussion question provided by the
instructor.
Student-Generated
Questions: one class per week is devoted to answering
open-ended student-generated questions over material
covered so far in the course. Students each make up questions, specifying why
they believe the question important. The class then orders the questions in order of
general interest, and for the rest of the class the
instructor answers as many as he/she can.
“Explication
de Texte”:
model a good study skill by reading passages from the text out loud and
analyzing them. Criticize,
but be logical and unemotional about it (most students
only associate “criticize” with emotional
griping).
Media
as Triggers for Discussion: instead
of showing an hour-long video, show short clips for
class discussions, short writing assignments, or to
model what you want students to do in an ensuing
demonstration or laboratory assignment.
Case
Studies:
the most famous example of using case studies is
Harvard Business School. But Harvard also uses case studies for
undergraduate class of up to 80 students! |