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Engaging Students: Developing and Measuring Guiding Principles for Learning. Chad Compton Paul Freebairn Ronald Miller Sela Unga Brigham Young University April 29, 2013. About BYUH. Small campus Diverse student population Student focused. Challenge. Improve Quality
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Engaging Students: Developing and Measuring Guiding Principles for Learning Chad Compton Paul Freebairn Ronald Miller SelaUnga Brigham Young University April 29, 2013
About BYUH • Small campus • Diverse student population • Student focused
Challenge • Improve Quality • Serve More Students • Decrease Costs
Half Day Faculty Retreat • Small group discussion of principles and best practices of teaching and learning. • Flip chart paper posted on wall (80 comments) • 10 dots for all faculty to vote • Top 20 best practices
Steering Committee • Purpose: Develop framework of teaching and learning (guiding principles) • 12 faculty, 4 students • Weekly meetings (read and discuss) 1+ years • Student/faculty interviews and focus groups
First Things • Teaching as a craft, art, and science • Focused on principles of learning
Result: 6 Principles of Learning Framework • Motivated by desire to serve • Active Not Passive • Self directed and responsible • Meaningful self reflection and assessment • Open to change • Skilled in learning process
Principles to Practices • Prepare • Engage • Improve
Implementation • General Education • Coordinated with student life • Increased classroom visits (lunch) • Emailed inspirational quotes regularly • Annual faculty and department reports • Presented framework to faculty and students • Implemented a 1-year new faculty orientation • Organized the Center for Teaching and Learning • Held on and off-campus seminars with guest speakers • Created brochures, website resources, and video vignettes • Conducted a student time study • Benchmarked student learning activities, opinions, and time usage
Framework Survey • About Yourself • course load, credit load, # of classes requiring preparation beforehand, hours spent per week on various activities (school & work, exercise & entertainment, and church, service, & other) • About the Framework • 2 open-ended questions: understanding and application of the Framework • About Your Learning • Prepare, Engage, and Improve • 5-point scale: never (1), hardly ever (2), sometimes (3), often (4), very often (5) • Demographics • Gender, Age, Regional Home Area, Class, GPA, etc.
In your own words, describe the BYU-Hawaii Framework for Student Learning The majority of students described the Framework as “preparing”, “engaging”, or “improving” their learning 39% of the respondents did not know, did not respond to the question appropriately, or were not familiar with the Framework Text analysis taken from Framework Survey
Please give a few specific examples of how you see the BYU-Hawaii Framework for Student Learning being applied by instructors in your class 37% of the respondents gave examples of pre-class preparation or class discussion when describing how the Framework was being applied. Text analysis taken from Framework Survey
Prepare: As a student, how often do you…? very often - often - Overall Mean sometimes - hardly ever - never -
Additional findings * Significant effects: p<.05 1= never; 2= hardly ever; 3= sometimes; 4= often; 5= very often
Engage: As a student, how often do you…? very often - often - sometimes - hardly ever - never -
Additional findings * Significant effects: p<.05 1= never; 2= hardly ever; 3= sometimes; 4= often; 5= very often
Improve: As a student, how often do you…? very often - often - sometimes - hardly ever - never -
Additional findings * Significant effects: p<.05 1= never; 2= hardly ever; 3= sometimes; 4= often; 5= very often
More students... • take initiative on their own to learn • thoroughly read and studied materials before class • set personal goals • engage in self-assessment
Fewer students... • discussed ideas with faculty outside of class • studied before class with others • prepared thoughtful questions before class • worked with others outside of class
Time Study Key Findings • underestimated time spent studying outside of class • underestimated time spent on exercise and entertainment-related activities
We're in it for the long-term • Creating new culture of learning takes time, resources, leadership, and buy-in • No "quick fix" available • Patience, persistence, and vision needed • What's next?
Please Contact Us • Chad Compton, Associate VP for Instructionchad.compton@byuh.edu • Paul Freebairn, Dir. Assessment & Testing freebaip@byuh.edu • Ronald Miller, Associate Professor of Psychology ronald.miller@byuh.edu • SelaUnga is the IR Planning Analyst Intern unga2@go.byuh.edu