teachnology: learning about learning through an active ... · teachnology: learning about learning...
TRANSCRIPT
Teachnology: Learning About
Learning Through an Active, Authentic
Approach to Using Technology
Christy Raymond – Assistant Professor
Margot Zemrau - Graduate StudentJose Benito Tovillo - Graduate Student
Jessica Ley - Instructional Designer
Festival of Teaching and LearningUniversity of Alberta
May 4, 2018
Road Map
• Setting the Scene• Collaborative Partnerships • Student Reactions and Responses• Thoughts for the Future• Discussion
Setting the Scene
Course Assignment, Goals and Desired Outcomes● Teaching Technology Project ● Teaching Technology Celebration
Technology as Content and Process● Not just learn “about” technology but learning “about” and “with”.
Defining the Terms
Active Learning - a range of “instructional activities involving students in
doing things and thinking about what they are doing” (Bonwell and Eison, 1991, p.5)
Experiential Learning - Lewis and Williams (1994, p.5): “In its simplest
form, experiential learning means learning from experience or learning by doing. Experiential education first immerses learners in an experience and then encourages reflection about the experience to develop new skills, new attitudes, or new ways of thinking.”
Authentic Assessment - “an assessment requiring students to use the
same competencies or combinations of knowledge, skills, and attitudes that they need to apply in the criterion situation in professional life” (Gulikers et al, p. 69)
...from a focus on covering decontextualized knowledge to an emphasis on teaching for a sense
of salience… (Benner, Sutphen, Leonard & Day, 2009, p. 82)
Students like to distinguish between the classroom and the real world, and if you interact with
students only in the classroom, you reinforce this false dichotomy(Bowen, 2012, p. 136)
Technology in our Context
• Teaching & Learning Office, Faculty of Nursing
• Technology Toolbox
• Authentic Technology Projects
You Want Us To Do What???
• First thoughts (Apprehensions)
• Awakening a Passion
• Fostering Curiosity
• Gaining a Critical Confidence
Pondering the Possibilities: Student Reflection
So Where To Now?
• Looking Back– What are the things that could have
been done differently?
• Looking Forward
– What questions can we continue to ask to study interventions and ideas such as these?
Thought Sharing and ?s
• How can active learning be actualized in different contexts?
• What principles of active learning, experiential learning and
authentic assessment overlap and how can we create synergy
between these components to inspire our students and
energize our learning environments?
• How do we create more evidence to support authentic, active
and experiential approaches to learning?
Ashford-Rowe, K., Herrington, J., & Brown, C. (2014). establishing the critical elements that determine authentic assessment. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher
Education, 39(2), 205-222.
Benner, P. Sutphen, M., Leonard, V., & Day, L. (2010). Educating nurses: A call for radical transformation. Stanford, CA: Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
of Teaching. Jossey-Bass.
Bonwell, C. C., and Eison, J.A. (1991). Active learning: creating excitement in the classroom. ASH#-ERIC Higher Education Report No. 1, Washington, D.C.: The
George Washington University, School of Education and Human Development.owen.
Bowen, J.A. (2012) Teaching naked: How moving technology out of your college classroom will improve student learning. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Cullen, R., Harris, M., & Hill, R.R. (2012). The Learner-centered curriculum: Design and implementation. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Fink, L.D. (2013). Creating significant learning experiences: An integrated approach to designing college courses. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Freeman, S., Eddy, S.L., McDonough, M., Smith, M.K., Okorafor, N., Jordt, H., and Wenderoth, M.P., (2014). Active learning increases student performance in
science, engineering, and mathematics. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), 111 (23), 8410-8415.
Lewis, L.H. & Williams, C.J. (1994). In Jackson, L. & Caffarella, R.S. (Eds.). Experiential Learning: A New Approach (pp. 5-16). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass
Poindexter, K., Hagler, D., & Lindell, D. (2015). Designing authentic assessment: Strategies for nurse educators. Nurse Educator, 40(1), 36-40.
Schwartz, M (2012). Best practices in experiential learning. Ryerson University: Learning and Teaching Office. Retrieved from http://www.ryerson.ca/It
Weimer, M. (2018). Deeper thinking about active learning. Faculty Focus Blog retrieved February28m 2018 from https://www.faculty focus.com/articles/teaching-
professor-blog/deeper-thinking-active-learning
References
Contact
Christy Raymond RN, PhDAssistant Professor
Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta
780-248-5769 or [email protected]