1 / 44

Today’s Students

Today’s Students. The Nation Goes to College. “A college degree has in many ways become what a high school diploma became 100-years ago-the path to a successful career and to knowledgeable citizenship.” (AAC & U, 2002, p. viii). Today’s Students. “Traditional” college student

weylin
Download Presentation

Today’s Students

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Today’s Students

  2. The Nation Goes to College “A college degree has in many ways become what a high school diploma became 100-years ago-the path to a successful career and to knowledgeable citizenship.” (AAC & U, 2002, p. viii)

  3. Today’s Students • “Traditional” college student • White male, 18 to 20 years old • Attending a four-year, liberal arts college • Full-time, and living on campus • Is now the minority in higher education (Magolda & Terenzini)

  4. Today’s Students • Majority of undergraduates are women • 28 % of undergraduates are from under-represented groups • Vocational emphasis valued over learning for learning’s sake • “Overwhelmed and more damaged” (Magolda & Terenzini)

  5. Today’s Students • Consumer mentality • Diverse and divided • Pragmatic, career oriented, and committed to doing well • Optimistic about personal/collective futures • Desperately committed to preserving the American dream (Levine & Cureton, 1998, p. 156-157)

  6. Today’s Students • 75% of full-time students are employed • 46% of those work at least 25 hours per week & 20% at least 35 hrs per week • Work hurts students grades (42%), limits their class schedules (53%) and choice of classes (38%)

  7. Increased Access • 75% of high school graduates continue their studies • 90% of high school seniors expect to attend college • Growing number of college students are over age twenty-five (AAC & U, 2002, p. 2)

  8. Different Attendance Patterns • 58% of bachelor’s degree recipients attend two or more colleges • 28% of undergraduates attend part-time • 73% of undergraduates are non- traditional students (AAC & U, 2002, p. 2)

  9. Today’s Students • Learning styles & preferences • Motivation & students’ learning styles • Visual & Kinesthetic • Positive view of technology & their ability to use it • Reading & the web • “slow, painful and torturous” vs. “ease & speed” KateManual

  10. Today’s Students • Need to see “Big Picture” before disaggregating • Mass customization • Low threshold for boredom • Multitasking • They learn from each other Kate Manual

  11. Today’s Students • Aliterate • Random access of information, less linear, likes graphics • Self focused • “Prove it to me” mentality • Wants something in exchange Susan Eisner

  12. Today’s Students • Independent • employment & discretionary income • Bypasses mainstream media • Relevance is important • Experience without obvious payoffs are frustrating • Responds well to “coaching” Susan Eisner

  13. Today’s Students • Effective efforts focus on students’ learning styles & preferences • Before “buying-in” students must see tangible benefits, in terms of their needs • High need for clarity, low tolerance for ambiguity (directions clear & succinct) Brown, Murphy & Nanny

  14. Today’s Students Higher education may be a part of students’ lives, but in many cases it is NOT the central focus of their lives.

  15. Preparation Lags • Only 47% of HS graduates complete a college prep curricula • Only 40% of HS teachers hold performance expectations that result in college-ready students • 53% of all college students take remedial courses (AAC & U, 2002, p. xxx)

  16. College Reading Readiness • Only 51% of 2005 ACT tested high school graduates have college-level reading skills • Reading readiness– over a 75% chance of a C or better, a 50% chance of a B or better in reading-dependent first-year courses • Reading readiness peaked at 55% 1999

  17. Rising to the Challenge • 40% of HS graduates are not prepared: • 39% of college students & HS graduates report gaps in their skills and abilities • 35% of college students & 39% of HS graduates have large gaps in at least one crucial skill; 86% of both groups have some gaps. • College instructors---42% of their students are not adequately prepared. • Employers---39% of HS graduates are not prepared for their current job & 45% are unprepared for advancement.

  18. Most Grads Cite Gaps In At Least One Skill 35% of college students report large gaps in at least one area, 86% report some gaps in at least one area. Oral communication/public speaking Science Mathematics Doing research Quality of writing that is expected Reading/understandingcomplicated materials 12% large gaps/struggling15% large gaps/struggling 11%14% 13%16% 10%13% 9%10% 5%9%

  19. College instructors Employers/Instructors Dissatisfied With High Schools’ Skills Prep Employers 25% very dissatisfied 22% very dissatisfied 24% very dissatisfied 20% very dissatisfied Reading/understandingcomplicated materials Quality of writing that is expected Doing research Mathematics Oral communication/public speaking Science

  20. College instructors Employers/Instructors Dissatisfied With High Schools’ Skills Prep Employers 29% very dissatisfied 22% very dissatisfied16% very dissatisfied 17% very dissatisfied Thinking analytically Work and study habits Applying what is learned in school to solving problems Computer skills

  21. How do you know your students & graduates have the information skills they will need?

  22. Questions?

  23. Learning ObjectivesBehavioral ObjectivesInstructional ObjectivesPerformance ObjectivesCompetencies Objectives

  24. Align your Outcomes MissionObjective/GoalOutcomes Institutional outcomes Program outcomes Course outcomes Class outcomes

  25. Questions to Facilitate Learning • What do you want students to be able to do? • What do students need to know in order to do this well? • What activity will facilitate their learning? • How will students demonstrate their learning? • How will I know students have done this well? Debra Gilchrist

  26. Learning Objectives A statement in specific and measurable terms that describes what students will know or be able to do as a result of engaging in a learning activity. Their purpose is to communicate expectations.

  27. Learning Objectives • Communicate expectations in terms of student learning • Audience Students will be able to… • Behavior Specific observable actions, • Condition Circumstances, tools, • Degree Performance level, standard

  28. Learning Objectives A statement of what students will be able to do when they have completed instruction Objectives are: • Related to intended outcomes, Not processes • Specific and measurable, Not broad and intangible • Concerned with students, Not faculty Arreola, 1998, p2

  29. Why Learning Objectives • Makes teaching and learning efficient • Focuses on students • Describes what students are expected to achieve as a result of instruction • Students know what is expected of them • Makes assessment of learning easier

  30. Why Learning Objectives • Knowing where you want to go, increases the chances of getting there • Guidance for the planning and delivery of instruction as well as the evaluation of student learning • Provides a focus for students • Allows for analysis in terms of the levels of teaching and learning

  31. Cognitive Level of Objectives • Bloom’s Taxonomy • Evaluation • Synthesis • Analysis • Application • Comprehension • Knowledge

  32. Cognitive Level of Objectives • Bloom’s TaxonomyLevel • Evaluation Application • Synthesis Application • Analysis Application • Application Application • Comprehension Understanding • Knowledge Knowledge

  33. Bloom’s Taxonomy of Objectives LevelLearning Verbs • Evaluation Criticizes, compares, concludes • Synthesis Creates, formulates, revises • Analysis Differentiates, diagrams, • Application Demonstrates, computes, solves • Comprehension Explains, summarizes, classifies • Knowledge Identifies, defines, describes

  34. Learning Verbs forBloom’s Taxonomy • Compare & contrast, critique, justify Evaluating • Adapt, combine, compare, contrast, design, generate Synthesizing Analyzing • Correlate, diagram, distinguish, outline, infer Applying • Determine, develop, compute, utilize • Classify, explain, discuss, give examples, summarize Comprehending Knowing • Define, describe, list, reproduce, enumerate

  35. When Writing Objectives Avoid imprecise verbs open to interpretation: Appreciate Believe Familiarize Grasp Know Learn Understand

  36. Effective Learning Objectives • Consistent with curricular goals • Clearly & unambiguously stated • Clearly observable & measurable • Realistic & doable • Appropriate for the level of students • Relevant & worth doing • Challenging & interesting

  37. Writing Learning Objectives • Identify what students are to learn • Identify what students are to do • Draft & revise as necessary • Are specific and clear • Are observable & measurable • Strive for higher order thinking

  38. How to Write Learning Objectives • Express them in terms of observable behavior • Facilitates assessment of learning • Objectives should answer these questions: • What must students do to prove that they have learned? • What should students be able to do as a consequence of their learning?

  39. Questions?

  40. Example Familiarize students with research articles. Students will be able to read a research article.

  41. Example Students will be able to identify the elements of a research article and explain the purpose of each element.

  42. Example In order to write more effective literature reviews, students will read and evaluate reviews written by other students. Using a rubric, students will note what features of a review make it good and what features make it less good. Stoloff

  43. Exercise

More Related