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The Redesign of General Psychology (PSY 101J) at The University of Southern Maine. John Broida Associate Professor NCAT Redesign Scholar. Intro to Psychology had problems.
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The Redesign of General Psychology (PSY 101J) at The University of Southern Maine John Broida Associate Professor NCAT Redesign Scholar
Intro to Psychology had problems. • Taught primarily on the Portland campus of a 3 campus institution (also Gorham and Lewiston/Auburn, and some off campus sites) • 1200 students per year on a 10,000 student campus • 14-16 sections (size ranges from 100 - 30) • Most were taking the course to fulfill a general education requirement • 6 other majors require the course • Students must take 2 social science courses to graduate • Taught as lecture course, with 3 exams • 25% of students dropped/failed/withdrew (DFW)
As psychologists we knew • Quizzing helps students learn • In class quizzes take time and effort • Grading, recording grades • Students argue for points – reduces time to lecture • We hoped to use the web to quiz students before class • Preliminary data suggested that students would read if quizzed • We could get them to prepare for classes if we quizzed • Repetition helps students learn • We wanted them to take more than one quiz, learn from their mistakes
Developed web-based quizzes as part of the C2R (Colleagues Committed to Redesign) • Used what is now called the supplemental model • We saved money by having everyone use common materials (though we used different exams) • One of us created the quizzes we all used. • Used the test bank from the publisher • Others found materials that we put into WebCT. • We had hoped to increase class size, but that has not happened yet – it will in the spring • We now have the publishers create the quizzes – no longer use a common text – in Blackboard.
Effect was immediately obvious on our now fully implemented design • Had to recreate our lectures • We stopped enabling our students not to read • Students spent more time studying • A few quit the course immediately – too much work – but enrollment did not drop appreciably • Students liked the quizzes, they provide important feedback before exams • DFW rate dropped by 8%, grades went up 10%
Difficulties associated with redesign • We had to change course management systems 3 times. • We had to create our own quizzes each time the publisher came out with a new edition or we changed books. • Publishers now create them for us • We wanted to use different books. • Attendance dropped in some sections • Those where the quizzes were the basis of exams • Thank goodness for classroom response systems