Sunday, June 3, 2012

Warning: Flipping Your Classroom May Lead to Increased Student Understanding

Math Notes

Math Notes

Flipping a classroom is not a teaching technique, it is more in line with a philosophy or way of teaching. It involves using technology as a tool, not the main focus, for helping students increase their understanding of science or math concepts.

Effective use of this way of thinking helps reduce student anxiety and frustration when studying science or math, especially when homework is involved. Unfortunately, failure to complete homework is a common problem among students, because they typically work in isolation.

This aggravation causes students to view homework as a maddening waste of time — leading to incomplete assignments and ultimately poor grades as they fall further and further behind.

Contrary to perceptions some may have about flipping a classroom, homework is not eliminated. It uses an entirely different approach (Learning 4 Mastery, Student Impressions).

How does Homework Change?

Homework becomes a series of short instructional videos, teacher lecture screencasts, and podcasts on your blog or wiki designed to replace in-class lectures.

Why is this a good thing?

Lecturing Does Not = Learning

Have you ever experienced the glazed look in your students’ eyes when lecturing?

Do you observe them taking copious notes and not really paying attention to you as you talk or place notes for them to copy on the overhead, chalk board, whiteboard, or smart board?

Also, this delivery method provides students limited time to make sense and formulate questions regarding new information, i.e., they do not have time to assimilate the information or make connections.

Impact of Lecturing

Lectures result in a one-way transfer of knowledge that does not pass through your students brains. It goes straight from your mouth or screen to their pen or pencil onto paper — passing go (the brain), proceeding directly to a potentially never opened notebook.

Through your best efforts to teach the important concept(s) in a lesson, they have learned little and typically cannot apply the information. This is why traditional home work is frustrating and viewed as a waste of time by most students. Typically, students do not remember enough from class to complete their homework assignments.

Impact on Homework

Using the flipped philosophy, students learn from podcasts, lectures, or videos at their own pace. Also, they can review them as many times as want. Of course questions will come up, even higher-order questions. Why? Because students now have time to think about what they are observing — this is a good thing. Now lectures and content videos are passing through your student brains! Homework is now useful and a beginning point for the next day’s class.

Science Investigation

Science Investigation

Homework Resources

The following is a short list of vieo resources for science and math.

  • Kahn Academy an extensive list of short videos of science and math concepts and procedures.

How Does In-Class Time Change?

Classes now become a center for student learning. You have more time to interact with students on a one-to-on basis. Additionally,:

  • you address student higher-order questions concerning homework.
  • your opportunity to discover student misconceptions and procedural confusion is increased.
  • students spend more time on experiments and investigations.
  • students work in groups or independently to solve problems.
  • you can differentiate instruction as necessary.

Flipping Your Classroom: Things to Consider

Is this for you and your students? Think about the following, remembering that like anything new it takes time and should be implemented in steps to avoid frustrating yourself and students. A flipped classroom is:

  • not a substitute for you.
  • a place where you are no longer the purveyor (one way communication) of all knowledge.
  • a place where content is stored on your blog or wiki for student review prior to tests and absent or home bound students can review.

Challenging the Status Quo

Why use this strategy? Because in far too many cases the status quo is not working.

Although there are a multitude of reasons why students drop out of school, the process begins as early as elementary school. The leading cause is poor grades and test scores. Students do not feel engaged in school and find it monotonous (California Dropout Research Project).

Sources

California Dropout Research Project, UC Santa Barbara, Gevirtz Graduate School of Education, 2008

Learning 4 Mystery, Flipped/Mastery Educational Model: Student Impressions, Accessed December 12, 2011

Should You Flip Your Classroom? Edutopia, October 26, 2011

The White House, President Obama Announces Steps to Reduce Dropout Rate, Office of the Press Secretary, 2010


  • Shawn Avery said,

    Thanks for the mention of Student Made Math Movies in this post! I know we don’t have the most extensive catalogue of videos at this point but look forward to continuously adding to it.

    Another great site that is aligned with standards and even provides PowerPoints is Learn Zillion. I just recently discovered it and look forward to borrowing videos from there as well.

    I’ve slowly been working towards adding videos for my students to watch at home. Sometimes the logistics can be tough due to not all students having the greatest computers or even a few not having internet access. There have to be some workarounds that I’m still playing with a little bit.

    Thanks for a great post!

  • Teach Science Right said,

    I’ve been doing a bit of research on the Flipped Classroom. I’m really liking the idea of utilizing it as an alternative teaching method, and being able to differentiate more is something I’d like to work on. But I have a quick question…

    When the flipped classroom is implemented, is there ever an issue of students not watching the lectures and falling behind?

    Any other resources you can provide (books, blogs, etc) would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!

    Great post, though. If you get a chance, check out my science teacher blog at http://www.teachscienceright.com!

  • Bob Lochel said,

    In response to teachscienceright, I have been working with teams of secondary math and science teachers on alternative delivery methods, and I have encouraged them to develop their own videos to utilize.

    This past summer, I had the opportunity to hear Lodge McCammon at Discovery Education. His STEM Fizz website gives a wealth of ideas on flipping. What I came away with from his sessions was the need to have the classroom teacher remain the expert. By finding pre-made videos online and asking kids to view them as lesson, teachers remove themselves from the role of expert. Today I was in a junior anatomy class where I asked the class if they would watch lectures online. The discussion eventually brought out the truth that many students felt they would probably not take a “canned” lecture seriously. But my next query, whether they would watch replays of lessons by their teacher, if they were shared online, was met with much more positive feedback. The students seemed to buy into the idea of being able to slow a lecture down, and going back to pick up missed nuggets.

    I am having teachers start this process by not moving to a pure flipping model, but by recording key lessons and examples to share with students on social media sites like Edmodo. The students can then become accustomed to viewing lectures and problems in this manner, and then we can start to move to a more full flipped model.

  • Sascha said,

    @TeachScienceRight:

    First I have to hate: Next time please don’t spam with your Name. That looks cheap. You got the link anyway and you also mention it in your comment. Keep it real.

    In case you really expected an answer and it wasn’t just a spam post: It’s always up to the teacher how he motivates to students to really watch videos and participate - you still gotta do the work ;-)

  • JRDSkinner said,

    I love the concept, but I dread the idea of children getting behind on their viewings, then wasting away the classroom face time.

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