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P291: Flipped Teaching in Organic Chemistry. Layne A. Morsch, PhD University of Illinois Springfield 2014 Biennial Conference on Chemical Education Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MI August 4, 2014. How Did I Get Here?. Fall 2013 Matt Stoltzfus
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P291: Flipped Teaching in Organic Chemistry Layne A. Morsch, PhD University of Illinois Springfield 2014 Biennial Conference on Chemical Education Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MI August 4, 2014
How Did I Get Here? • Fall 2013 • Matt Stoltzfus • Best use of face time with students • What is the hardest thing you ask students to do each week? When do they do it? • Danae Quirk-Dorr • Tips on implementing flipped teaching
Previous Classroom Style • Summer 2013 – Organic 1 – lecture format • Began incorporating technology into lecture with ChemDraw for iPad and Flick-to-Share • Fall 2013 – Organic I – lecture format • Began use of electronic homework, ebook – McGraw-Hill Connect and LearnSmart • ChemDraw with Flick-to-Share in class
Spring 2014 – Organic II – flipped format • All lectures recorded using Camtasia Studio, Bamboo tablet, microphone, Autodesk Sketchbook Express • Chapters broken down into multiple videos (length 3:08 to 10:43) • Total videos length 6:42:46 • Average video length 7:04 • Why?
Optimal Video Length Guo, Philip J., Juho Kim, and Rob Rubin. "How video production affects student engagement: An empirical study of mooc videos." In Proceedings of the first ACM conference on Learning@ scale conference, pp. 41-50. ACM, 2014.
Summer 2014 – Organic I – flipped format • All lectures recorded using Camtasia Studio, Bamboo tablet, microphone, Autodesk Sketchbook Express • Chapters broken down into multiple videos (length 3:39 to 29:53) • Total videos length 8:48:26
Flipped Format cont. • Spring • Quizzes embedded into each video • 10 points per chapter given for correctly answering video questions (110/740 points)
In Class Problem Solving • In-Class Problem Solving was the focus of the majority of class time • Many problems would be solved individually followed by detailed solutions • Students would be given problems to solve, then were asked to explain the solution to their neighbor
Working Problems at Boards • Spring/Summer classroom had 6 whiteboards surrounding room • Placed a problem on each board and asked students to come up to solve • Occasionally bribed them with candy if they attempted board problems
Used ChemDraw for iPad and Flick-to-Share • ChemDraw for iPad with Flick-to-Share was used on occasional problems throughout class • Points given for trying “Flick” problems each day in class • Encouraged attendance
How does ChemDraw with Flick-to-Share work? • I use Flick-to-Share to create a class group • I can send Flicks to the whole class • They can work out the problem and flick the result back to me • Students that have iPads can Flick to each other while studying
Improved Learning Environment • 100% engagement in problem solving • Students get more direction in problem solving with many more examples • Increased professor-student interaction • Points don’t seem to make a difference in participation • Students get a chance to teach each other
Difficulties • Some students do not like change • Large time investment to begin (recording and editing all the videos) • Had to redefine my classroom preparation • Still working on this • Defining my expectations
Next Steps • Analyze learning gains • Expand methods of engagement • All students will have iPads for Fall Semester • Use Explain Everything to have students create video vignettes
Acknowledgments • Dr. Matt Stoltzfus, The Ohio State Univerity • Dr. DanaeQuirk-Dorr, Minnesota State University, Mankato • Chris Luker, Kent State University • Kara McElwrath, UIS Assistant Director of Client Services • FarokhEslahi, UIS CIO • UIS Scholarly Presentation Support Program Questions?