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Best Practices on Teaching & Learning. Dr. Maan A. Kousa Associate Professor Department of Electrical Engineering. Why should I care?. Duty Valuable Opportunity for Experience. Building a Good Reputation Paving the Road for Future Career ………. Things’ I Have Learned about Teaching.
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Best Practices on Teaching & Learning Dr. Maan A. Kousa Associate Professor Department of Electrical Engineering
Why should I care? • Duty • Valuable Opportunity for Experience. • Building a Good Reputation • Paving the Road for Future Career • ………
Things’ I Have Learned about Teaching • The most valuable service an instructor can provide to his students is to motivate them • The last thing you want a class to be is a transcription session • Students will not put more effort than you. • Students cannot keep attention for long periods, no matter how interesting the subject is.
Retention Versus Delivery Methods 90% Demonstrations 70% Teaching others Student retention of information after 24 hours 50% Lectures Reading materials 25% Discussions 15% 5% Visual materials Reading materials Visual materials Teaching others Lectures Demonst. Discussions
Effective Teaching Methods for Large Classes, J. Carpenter, U. South Carolina, 2006
Scope of Presentation • Introduce tips that: • Engage Students • Can be used in class • Do not require class or material restructuring. • Because: • Everyone can try • Less resistance from students • Build the “culture” of participation gradually.
Why to Engage Students? • Deeper Impact • Longer Retention • Enhance independent learning. • Improve student concentration. • Student ownership of their learning. • Development of interpersonal skills • More fun, less Boring(both to student and instructor). • Improves student evaluation ! • ….
DSQ Discussion-Stimulating Questions
Why Do We Ask Questions • Review of Material • Assess Student Understanding. • Draw Students Attention • Transitioning • Arousing Interest • Maintain Discipline • Stimulate Class participation • convert lectures to dialogues.
Features of DSQ • Not YES/NO questions. • Designed for Higher level of thinking • “2/3 of questions asked in a classroom required only recitation of a memorized text as a satisfactory answer” (1912) • “Overwhelming proportion of questions asked by college professors were on the memory level”. (1982) • Has anything changed today?
Bloom’s Taxonomy:6 levels of Cognitive Thinking Assess, convince, conclude, judge, support, criticize, defend. Evaluation Compose, generalize, plan, substitute, create, formulate, integrate, design, anticipate, compile, negotiate, "what if" Synthesis Analysis • Analyze, arrange, connect, divide, infer, classify, explain, correlate Application Apply, demonstrate, modify, prove, construct, develop, establish, use information in new situations. Comprehension Associate, compare, distinguish, differentiate, interpret, order Knowledge Describe, List, Define, name, state
Why HOT Questions? • More stimulating than purely descriptive questions. • Those who “do not know” can participate
And … • Phrase your question Clearly. • What did we say about FS ? ! • Ask one thing at a time: • What are the disadvantages of X, can we remove them all, how and at what cost ?! • Write Down Your Questions.
Response Time • 20% of students do 80% of the talking. • When teachers ask questions they typically look for immediate response from students. • Allowing few seconds for the response … • Promotes self-thinking • Promotes higher levels of participation and longer responses. • The frequency of “I don’t know” decreases. • Improves language use, attitudes and teacher expectations. (Gambrell, 1983; McTighe,1988; Stahl, 1994)
How much RT is needed? • Allows nearly every student to complete the thinking needed for the task. • Matches the “HOT” required. • Takes into consideration the Language Barrier • Keeps students on board.
Watch Your Feedback • Reinforce good responses. • Praise the student in a strong positive way • “Absolutely correct”. “I like that”. • Make comments pertinent to the student response • You were so careful to include all the conditions. • Build on Students responses now and then.
Student-to-Student Q&A • Let students answer each other. • Encourage students to ask review questions to their peers. • We learn by asking questions more than we do by answering them. • What is harder for us, setting exams or solving them? • “It is better to ask some of the questions than know all the answers”.
Think-Pair-Share (TPS) Teacher poses Q T P S
PAIR Phase What do we gain from … Think Pair Share Compared to … Think Share
PAIR • Advantages: • Guaranteeing that everyone would have thought in the THINK phase. • Refining their thinking as well as the language used to explain their perceptions in a non-threatening environment. • Students in many instances learn better from each other then from their instructor.
PAIR • More Advantages: • Realizing the benefits of sharing ideas with peers. • Less confident students have the opportunity to rehearse their ideas and be encouraged to present them in front of the class. • To Improve the communication skills with colleagues of the same level.
Now, when we SHARE … • Students who would never speak up in class are now both required and enabled to participate. • The classroom is no longer dominated by a few students, but is open for contribution from all.
Management of TPS • Manage the “Think time”, “Pair time” & “Share time”. The longer the time “less discipline” environment is more likely to happen.
Effective Teaching Methods for Large Classes, J. carpenter, U. South Carolina, 2006
Advantages of JIGSAW • Every student learns from his peers. • Every student teaches his peers. • Cooperation by Design • Typical for problem solving sessions.
Home and Expert Groups 1 2 6 5 9 10 13 14 Study Groups 3 4 8 15 16 7 11 12 2 14 4 16 1 13 3 15 Teaching Groups 11 7 12 10 6 8 9 5
Remarks • The class layout needs little adjustment • The instructor goes around to facilitate the work of the groups when needed. • Some groups may complete the task early. Prepare some time filling. • A comprehensive quiz may be given at the end of the session to students on individual basis.
How students feel about JIGSAW • We act spontaneously. • We ask all types of silly questions that never dare to put to the instructor. • Practice our teaching skills. • We can discuss in Arabic. • Assess our understanding of the subject. • Rank oneself against other students. • No chance to feel bored or sleepy. • Time passes very fast. • Some room for fun
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