a realist's guide: flipping the classroom

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Flipping the Classroom A Realist’s Guide

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In this beginner's guide to Flipping the Classroom, learn the tips and tricks you can use to start flipping your classroom today.

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Page 1: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide

Page 2: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomIntroduction

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What is the flipped classroom?Just what it sounds like: a learning model in which the classic

structure does a somersault and lands upside down. Your

first thought: that seems painful. Actually no — it provides a

welcome new perspective.

Page 3: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomIntroduction

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In more concrete terms.Students use digital tools to listen to lectures and review other resources on

their own time (outside of the classroom). In class, they work together on

activities and concepts — with the help of the teacher — putting what they’ve

learned into practice, often times learning from each other.

Since its emergence circa 2007, the flipped classroom has gotten

a lot of buzz. It is praised as a way to do the following

• Engage active learners with a collaborative and customized

educational environment

• Increase time for individualized, one-on-one instruction

• Encourage more and better student-instructor communication

• Enable high-performing students to expand their knowledge while

giving struggling students more tools for catching up

• Involve parents more meaningfully in the learning process

Page 4: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomIntroduction

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Flipping for beginners.Standing on your head is harder than it looks, and flipping the classroom is, too.

That’s especially true for instructors just getting started with a flip. And with a

concept this new, most are beginners. Those who have been at it the longest

say the strategy for successful flipping combines enthusiasm with a healthy

dose of realism. In this guide, you’ll learn from their experiences and get some

tested-in-the-real-world tips for doing a flip of your own.

What you’ll learn from this guide1. Anatomy of a flip.2. The benefits of upside down instruction.3. Tips for successful flips.

Page 5: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomAnatomy of a flip

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1. Anatomy of a flip.

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A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomAnatomy of a flip

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The inspiration.When Sherry Spurlock decided in 2011 to flip her classes at Pekin Community

High School in Pekin, Ill., she had the necessary enthusiasm. And she

understood what she was taking on — mostly.

Spurlock had attended a workshop by Jonathan Bergmann and Aaron Sams,

Colorado high school teachers who are considered architects of the flipped

classroom. Their message was inspiring, especially since their success recording

lectures and using face-to-face time to shepherd student learning was forged in

a chemistry classroom. Spurlock asked school administrators to back her plan

to flip all of her classes — four chemistry courses and a physics course — in one

fell swoop. Then she spent much of the summer getting ready. “I warned my husband: ‘I think this really is going to make a difference for the kids, but is going to take a lot of time.’”

Page 7: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomAnatomy of a flip

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The preparation.“My free time was spent putting together materials for the podcasts, making

videos, creating worksheets,” Spurlock said. “Once the school year started,

things would come up that needed to be redone or that I wanted to add.

And so a typical day would be to show up at school at about 6:30 a.m. to get

everything ready in the classroom for the students and spend the rest of the

day working with four-person student groups. At the end of the school day, I

would have a list of things that I needed to do to get ready for the next day.”

Page 8: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomAnatomy of a flip

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The flip.Spurlock’s class was transformed. “In my traditional classroom, the students

came in and sat in neat little rows. I lectured for 45 to 50 minutes, and they

took notes and occasionally asked a question. And then I assigned homework

designed to reinforce what we talked about in the class. They went home, tried

to figure it out, got discouraged, came back the next day, and we went over

the material again,” she said. “Now, they go home and watch the content. They come into class and form groups of four. They work with each other on problem sets and worksheets, ask each other questions and ask me questions. I am right there as

they’re going through those reinforcing exercises. I can walk them through the

process, if they need me to. I’m there to question them until they understand

what’s going on and can then move on. And they act as each other’s mentors

and keep one another on track.”

Page 9: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomAnatomy of a flip

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The payoff.Spurlock survived her first flipped year, and now is reaping the rewards of her

hard work. It’s too soon to say whether students’ test scores have improved

in the flipped classroom, although Pekin High is studying that. “What encourages me to continue with the flipped classroom is the attitude and the perception of the students,” Spurlock

said. “They are much more involved in what’s going on in class than they ever

have been in the past. That’s a much better sign for me than their test scores.

And, from a time-management perspective, the second year has been much,

much easier. A lot of the content is done already. It’s just a matter of organizing

and posting and making improvements. This year there’s less of that setup

work and much more active time with the students.”

Page 10: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomAnatomy of a flip

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We were spending inordinate amounts of time re-teaching lessons to students who missed class, and the recorded lectures became our first line of defense. Our absent students loved the recorded lectures. Students who missed class were able to learn what they missed.

— Jonathan Bergmann Chemistry teacher Woodland Park, CO

Page 11: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomAnatomy of a flip

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Genesis of the flip.Chemistry teachers Aaron Sams and Jonathan Bergmann are considered class-

flipping pioneers. Their lectures and explanatory videos, originally posted online

for their Woodland Park, CO, high school students, have become go-to tools for

students and instructors around the world. Their book Flip Your Classroom: Reach

Every Student in Every Class Every Day is now a prime resource for novice flippers.

In this 2011 blog excerpt, Bergmann explains that they started with a self-serving

plan but quickly realized the benefits to students:

“In all honesty, we recorded our lessons out of selfishness. We were spending

inordinate amounts of time re-teaching lessons to students who missed class,

and the recorded lectures became our first line of defense. Our absent students

loved the recorded lectures. Students who missed class were able to learn what

they missed. Some students who were in class and heard the live lecture began

to re-watch the videos. Some would watch them when reviewing for exams…

We began to share the links to the recorded lectures, and teachers from all over

the country began to take notice … All in all, it was amazing to see what we were

doing in our small town being noticed across the country.”

Page 12: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomThe benefits of upside down instruction

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2. The benefits of upside down instruction.

Page 13: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomThe benefits of upside down instruction

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The reward.Sherry Spurlock describes how flipping her classes has made learning — and

teaching — more rewarding:

1. Personalized instruction: “Since flipping the classes, I not only know all my

students by name, I also know what they can and cannot do. I know what I can

and cannot say to them. I know how far I can push them and what I can expect

from them. It’s a whole different interaction with them.”

2. Student engagement: “Students are more deeply engaged, and I know that

because I’m getting much more interesting questions. I used to hear, ‘I just

don’t get it.’ Now, I hear, ‘What do you suppose would happen if this were to

occur? If I change this around, what will happen?’”

3. Skills for the real world: By working in groups, students are getting a

preview of what their postsecondary and real world experience will look like,

where group problem solving and project-based learning are part of the daily

routine.

Page 14: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomThe benefits of upside down instruction

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4. Learning beyond the lesson: “Flipping the classroom puts a lot of

responsibility back on students; it takes away any places to hide. There is less

opportunity for them to just copy a friend’s homework and hand it in. If they

don’t get something done, it’s not the teacher’s fault or the school’s fault. They

have to accept that responsibility. And most of them step up to the plate and

do it. They really grow.”

5. Improved quality of life: “I still start about 6:30 a.m. to get the lab set up.

But I leave between 3 and 3:30 p.m. I don’t have to take home grading because

students do most of their work in class, and it’s graded there so they get

immediate feedback. I give students my home phone number in case they are

confused at home about what they’re doing. Before the flipped class, I would

get up to 30 calls a night. Now, I get one or two a week. Students can rewind

my lecture and listen again and again. They can bring questions into class the

next day where they can get hands-on help. And my working day ends with the

school day. I get to spend time with my family in the evening, and that makes a

big difference.”

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A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomTips for successful flips

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3. Tips for successful flips.

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A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomTips for successful flips

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Getting started.Flipping the classroom is a new idea, but every teacher who tries it doesn’t

have to reinvent the wheel. Go online to see what flipped strategies others have

come up with and learn from their successes and mistakes. Here are a few tips

to get you started:

Know your tools. Understand how to use the classroom technology and

learning management system tools at your disposal. Can you post a video

clip via your LMS? Can students exchange ideas or ask questions in an online

environment that also allows you to distribute materials and track grades?

Leverage tech tools to make your flip — and your job — easier.

Don’t do the bulldozer. Spurlock flipped all of her classes at one time. In

hindsight, she says, that all-in approach added to her workload and stress and

didn’t leave much time for experimentation. Start by flipping one class and use

what you’ve learned to flip others.

Page 17: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomTips for successful flips

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Find a partner. Flipping pioneers Bergmann and Sams attribute much of their

success to teamwork. Working in sync with peers has made the flip more

manageable for Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School teachers. And those like

Spurlock who forge through alone say it would have been easier to share ideas

and materials with another teacher. Working with a partner also makes a flip

less overwhelming because you can share content-creation duties.

Set expectations. At the beginning of this academic year, Spurlock put

together a PowerPoint presentation for parents and students. It explained

how a flipped classroom worked and what students’ responsibilities would be.

Setting those expectations early — and with the entire family — helped ease

students’ adjustment to the flipped environment.

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A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomTips for successful flips

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We gave the teachers who were doing our flipped classroom pilots some examples. We said, ‘Your pages need to look like this. Your video should be this long. Your lesson should last this long. It should include these components. Now, you make it work for your subject and your teaching style.’

— Jennifer Shoaf PA Cyber’s curriculum director

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A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomTips for successful flips

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Flipping as a team.At the Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School (PA Cyber), consistency is key to

ensuring a quality online education. So, when teachers began flipping their

classes, they stuck to a single game plan. And they discovered that flipping in

sync made the whole process less daunting.

“We gave the teachers who were doing our flipped classroom pilots some

examples,” said Jennifer Shoaf, PA Cyber’s curriculum director. “We said, ‘Your

pages need to look like this. Your video should be this long. Your lesson should

last this long. It should include these components. Now, you make it work for

your subject and your teaching style.’”

Those parameters were freeing, rather than limiting, said flipped classroom

teacher Christine Crow, who noted that instructors still put their own unique spin

on lectures and materials. Sticking to the guidelines made flipping her class less overwhelming, she said, and because all the teachers follow the same format, peer-to-peer advice was on-point and incredibly valuable. “We are all in it together.”

Page 20: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomTips for successful flips

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Grading the flip.“One of the big marks in the ‘con’ column of the flipped classroom right now

is the lack of systematic research on its effectiveness,” said Robert Talbert,

Mathematics professor at Grand Valley State University and flipped classroom

experimenter. “There’s a lot of enthusiasm and interest, but not a lot of data.”

At Pekin Community High School, Information Specialist Cynthia Hinderliter is

overseeing a plan to gauge how the flipped classroom stacks up when it comes

to test scores.

Using ACT’s College Readiness assessment, the school will evaluate subgroups

of math and science scores to compare how students in Spurlock’s flipped

chemistry and physics classes perform compared with students in traditional

classes.

The results will show whether the anecdotal evidence of student success in

flipped classes can be verified and quantified.

Page 21: A Realist's Guide: Flipping the Classroom

A Realist’s Guide to Flipping the ClassroomTips for successful flips

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On the flip side.With each passing academic year, technology will make

flipping classrooms even easier and more motivating.

Is flipping the classroom right for you? Only you can

determine that, but here’s what we do know: trying a

flipped classroom is right for everyone.

Stay connected AND learn more about flipping your class