Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Lecture-Free Instruction

I recently remembered seeing a video about a lecture-free Introduction to Biology class at the University of Minnesota that surfaced last winter. I've been doing a fair amount of reflection about my teaching practice lately, often involving how instruction needs to be changed in my classroom because we have moved to a 1-to-1 laptop setting in our school last year. I feel that my instruction should no longer be about the dissemination of information, but rather the acquisition and processing of information. This has been a struggle for me as an educator because science, and biology in particular, is a very fact-based rather than process based discipline. But at the end of the year, I am more concerned with my students remembering processes over facts. I was intrigued by several aspects of the video at the time of my viewing, but I was not really ready to implement those ideas in my classroom.



I really like the idea of a concept laboratory instead of a lecture. In my effort to drastically decrease the amount I lecture, but still provide structure to my class, this is the framework that I've come up with:
  • Students complete a reading assignment outside of class. I am in the process of producing reading guides for each reading assignment as a scaffold.
  • Using Google Docs, I send a formative assessment form to each student at the beginning of class as an opener to assess their understanding of the reading assignment.
  • Student desks in my classroom are arranged in small groups. In these small groups students will discuss questions, extensions, applications of the reading assignment to process as a group. I can use this time to clear up misconceptions with students as identified by the formative form.
  • Towards the end of class, have a whole group discussion of material. This is a possible time for groups to report out about what they learned or to wrap-up and summarize the learning objectives for the class period.
I am now looking for resources to effectively implement cooperative group strategies in my classroom to maximize the concept laboratories.

1 comment:

  1. After talking with some colleagues this morning, I'm not as sold about the Google Form as the formative assessment data collection. Mostly because the form disappears when they submit it to me. Maybe paper is a better choice?

    ReplyDelete