Clickers in Context - Department of Physics | Oregon State University
Transcription
Clickers in Context - Department of Physics | Oregon State University
Clickers in Context HOW THEY ARE USED, WHAT STUDENTS WANT, AND WHAT WORKS Scientific Teaching: If we approach teaching the same way we approach scientific research, we can make informed decisions about how to improve student learning. (Handelsman et al, 2004) One Common Reform A Peer Instruction question Another example A. Yes, left B. Yes, right C. No D. Don’t know Anatomy of Peer Instruction See also Mazur, “Peer Instruction, A User’s Manual” Why is Peer Instruction helpful? But how is PI actually used? Dancy & Henderson, Pedagogical practices and instructional change of faculty, Am. J. Phys., 78(10), Oct 2010.Web survey of 722 physics faculty at various institutions, initial sample of 2000. % of faculty reporting to be familiar with RBIS “RBIS”= Research-Based Instructional Strategy * Research-Based Instructional Strategy Dancy & Henderson, Pedagogical practices and instructional change of faculty, Am. J. Phys., 78(10), Oct 2010. % of faculty reporting as current user of RBIS “RBIS”= Research-Based Instructional Strategy ~ 50% * Research-Based Instructional Strategy Dancy & Henderson, Pedagogical practices and instructional change of faculty, Am. J. Phys., 78(10), Oct 2010.Web survey of 722 physics faculty at various institutions, initial sample of 2000. In particular: % of instructors who report using Peer Instruction and also report including the following elements of Peer Instruction: Students discuss ideas in class* Students discuss qualitative/quantitative problems in class* Whole class voting* Conceptual questions* 27% 27% 38% 64% Is this a problem?! * Every class Dancy & Henderson, Pedagogical practices and instructional change of faculty, Am. J. Phys., 78(10), Oct 2010.Web survey of 722 physics faculty at various institutions, initial sample of 2000. Three threads: Clickers in context Three threads: Clicker use in context How are instructors using PI? What do students prefer? What are researchers finding works best? Image: Dvotygirl on Wikimedia Three threads: Clickers in context Three threads: Clicker use in context How are instructors using PI? What do students prefer? What are researchers finding works best? Image: Dvotygirl on Wikimedia Followed-up faculty interviews 722 Physics Faculty Surveyed 51 Faculty invited to parCcipate in PI interviews 46 Faculty invited to parCcipate in WP interviews 35 Faculty interviewed about PI (69%) 35 Faculty interviewed about WP (76%) Henderson, Dancy & Turpen, in preparation Perceived Affordances of PI Dissatisfaction with lecture Evidence of effectiveness from personal experience Gets students active Departmental support or encouragement Evidence of effectiveness from data Intuitively makes sense to me Provides feedback to the instructor Gets students working together Encourages depth of understanding Students learn by hearing a peer’s explanation Students learn by giving an explanation to a peer Forces more students to participate % total 57.1 54.3 48.6 45.7 42.9 37.1 34.3 31.4 25.7 25.7 22.9 20.0 Henderson, Dancy & Turpen, in preparation Users Non-users Perceived Constraints of PI Requires time and energy to change Content coverage concerns, personal belief Difficulty in getting students engaged Student deficiencies In personal experience it did NOT work Structural, lack of resources Structural, class size Structural, lack of appropriate classroom Trouble finding good questions Difficulty getting student buy-in Current practices are effective Intuitively don’t think that PI will work Content coverage concerns, external requirements Content coverage concerns, institutional expectations % total 57.1 48.6 48.6 37.1 34.3 34.3 31.4 31.4 31.4 28.6 25.7 25.7 22.9 20.0 Henderson, Dancy & Turpen, in preparation Nine Peer Instruction Features 20 Adapts: Instructor adapts to student responses to in-class tasks Answers not graded: Students are not graded on in-class tasks Commit to answer: Individual students have a dedicated time to think about in-class tasks and commit to answers independently Conceptual questions: Uses conceptual in-class tasks Tasks draw on student ideas: In-class tasks draw on common student prior ideas or common student difficulties Multiple choice questions: In-class tasks have discrete answer options Questions interspersed: In-class tasks are interspersed throughout class period Students discuss: Students discuss their ideas about in-class tasks with their peers Vote after discussion: Students commit to an answer after peer discussion Henderson, Dancy & Turpen, in preparation How do faculty use PI features? ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Henderson, Dancy & Turpen, in preparation How do faculty use PI? Self-reported use 10 Users Former Users Non-Users 9 Ave 4 features used # of interviewees 8 Ave 1 feature used 7 Ave 6 features used 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 # of PI features used 7 8 9 The take-home message The perceived challenges of using Peer Instruction (before trying it) may be different from actual challenges (faced by users) When someone says they use “Peer Instruction,” it may have little meaning. What features are they using? Features that may be essential to student learning are being dropped: Committing to an answer before discussion Revoting after discussion Conceptual questions based on student difficulties Is this a problem?! Three threads: Clicker use in context How are instructors using PI? What do students prefer? What are researchers finding works best? Image: Dvotygirl on Wikimedia Student survey data Using clickers at CU-Boulder in lower and upper- division since 1995 Surveyed 14 upper-division and 2 graduate classes on attitudes towards clickers, 400 responses Study by Kathy Perkins and Chandra Turpen "Student Perspectives on Using Clickers in Upper-division Physics Courses" Katherine K. Perkins & Chandra Turpen, PERC Proceedings 2009, AIP Press (2009) Students Find Clickers Useful Q: How useful for your learning is the addiCon of clicker quesCons compared to pure lecture with no clicker quesCons? Lecture with clickers much more useful 82% of students Lecture with clickers more useful Same 77% recommend using in upper-division courses Pure lecture more useful Upper‐div courses using clickers: 16 courses, 400 student responses Pure lecture much more useful 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% Perkins & Turpen, 2009 % of students Students’ recommendation for implementation N=11 courses, 224 responses Why are clickers seen as useful (or not) Ways to improve mastery Common categories of why clickers help or not # of responses* (out of Code 70) PosiCves 64 Improved mastery 35 Focus of AcIvity 31 AcIve processing/acIvity 44 Discussion with others 20 Feedback to students 20 Time/pause to think, OR Immediacy 18 Engagement 16 NegaCves Waste of Time/Unnecessary Inappropriate Timing/Premature Reduced Mastery Babying/Too much hand holding *Responses can be coded into mulIple categories. 9 7 3 1 1 % 91% 50% 44% 63% 29% 29% 26% 23% 13% 10% 4% 1% 1% Perkins & Turpen, 2009 Preferences for vote and/or revote 91% prefer peer discussion as part of clicker use Doesn't matter Directly to peer discussion Individual thinking, then peer discussion, then vote Individual voting, then peer discussion, then revote No discussion, just vote 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% % of students Perkins & Turpen, 2009 Preferred question types Very useful Prefer 2-5 questions (83%), challenging & interspersed with lecture (87%) Useful Somewhat useful Challenging conceptual questions Recalling a fact Recalling a fact just stated Plugging numbers into equation Mostly useless Completely useless 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% % of students Perkins & Turpen, 2009 Take-home messages Students like clickers & feel they help their learning Their descriptions of why they help them learn are consistent with the research literature Many of student preferences for clicker use align with the recommendations of Peer Instruction method and with recommendations of developers. So what?! Perkins & Turpen, 2009 Three threads: Clicker use in context How are instructors using PI? What do students prefer? What are researchers finding works best? Image: Dvotygirl on Wikimedia Talking brings convergence 33 Eric Mazur - Harvard U. Before discussion Why do you think this happens? AZer discussion A B A C (A) Students are ge]ng answers from the ‘smart’ kids (B) They’re learning from their discussions (C) They just needed more Ime to think about it B C Mazur, 1997 The hypothesis: If students learn from peer discussion, they should show beaer performance on a similar quesIon. Ask a second, similar quesIon without any instructor input: Q2 Undergrad introductory geneIcs course. 16 Q1/Q2 pairs. Research by Michelle Smith, Bill Wood, Wendy Adams, Carl Wieman, Jenny Knight, Nancy Guild, Tin Tin Su, MCDB. Smith et al., Science. 2009, 323(5910):122. Are they learning from peers? 100 1) Students answer Q1 individually. 80 Percent 60 Students talk to 2) neighbors and answer Q1 again (Q1AD = Q1“After Discussion”). 3) 40 20 0 Q1 Individual Q1AD After Discussion Q2 Individual Students answer Q2 individually . Q2 tests same concept as Q1. Then explain answers to Q1 and Q2 n= 350 students Smith et al., Science. 2009, 323(5910):122. Can students answer difficult quesCons correctly aYer discussion? 100 Q1 90 Q1aYer discussion Percent correct 80 Q2 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Easy (5 quesCons) Medium (7 quesCons) Smith et al., Science. 2009, 323(5910):122. Difficult (4 quesCons) Very few students knew correct answer to Q1, but aYer discussion, many more answer correctly: students are construcCng their own knowledge Discussion helps students learn: students who correct their initial answer to Q1 are much more likely to answer Q2 correctly All Students Individual Q1 After Discussio n Q1AD 52% correct 92% correct Individual Q2 90% correct 48% incorrect 8% incorrect 42% 10% incorrect correct 42% correct 77% 58% incorrect correct 58% incorrect 23% 44% incorrect correct 56% incorrect Professors like to talk… does this research mean we shouldn’t? (peer discussion is enough?) or, why does it maaer if they got the answer from talking to their peers, couldn’t the professor give the students the answer to Q1 and have the same effect? Compare peer discussion to instructor explanaCon, and to a combinaCon of both Combination Instructor explanation Peer discussion Skip instructor explanation Vote individually Peer Discussion Skip peer discussion Intro genetics course Majors & nonmajorsQ Tested learning with Q2-Q1 diff. <c>=100(mean Q2-mean Q1)/(100-mean Q1) Instructor explanation only Instructor only Smith, Krauter, Wood and Knight (2011), CBE Life Sci Educ 10, 55-63 How does peer discussion compare to instructor explanaCon only? The combinaCon mode results in the highest increase in learning <c>=100(mean Q2-mean Q1)/(100-mean Q1) <c> change between Q1 and Q2 calculated for each student for questions in that category, then averaged for all students Smith, Krauter, Wood and Knight (2011), CBE Life Sci Educ 10, 55-63 How might strong, medium, and weak students respond to these techniques? What would you predict? Which students will have the highest gain on Q2? a. Weak (<33% correct) b. Medium (33‐66% correct) c. Strong (>66% correct) Student classification Majors: combinaCon is becer for all students Non‐majors: combinaCon is becer for moderate and strong, not weak Really fascinating: Instructor explanation is particular un-helpful for strong students Smith, Krauter, Wood and Knight (2011), CBE Life Sci Educ 10, 55-63 Take-home messages • Asking quesCons in class is a pedagogical tool that will produce student learning, especially if students are given a chance to discuss their ideas • When students are challenged (with difficult quesCons), they learn from the process of solving such quesCons • The instructor explanaCon + peer discussion is the most effecCve approach to understanding the ideas. Three threads: Clicker useSo in context what?! How are instructors using PI? What do students prefer? What are researchers finding works best? Image: Dvotygirl on Wikimedia THANK YOU! More about our research at http://per.colorado.edu Resources on clickers at http://STEM.colorado.edu Podcast & resources on PERusersguide.org/podcasts My blog: http://blog.sciencegeekgirl.com Kudos to the people who actually did this research: Henderson, Dancy, Turpen, Perkins, Knight, Smith, Wood, Guild, Wieman & Su.