Bloom's Sixth
Engaging students through silent contemplation
Here’s another approach to using silence as a motivator for active learning.
I’ve written previously about how Genelle Belmas uses classroom silence to help students get into a “flow state” of concentration, creativity, and thinking. Kathryn Rhine, as associate professor of anthropology, uses silence in as part of an activity that challenges students to think through class material and exchange ideas but without speaking for more than 30 minutes.
Kathryn Rhine explains…
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by Doug Ward
Education Matters: Active learning, Educause, and student skill levels
Notes by hand or with laptops? Sorry, wrong question.
Cathy Davidson raises exactly the right question in the debate about whether students should take notes by hand or with laptops in class. The real issue, Davidson writes, is that instructors should be working to avoid lecture and instead engage students in active learning. Even in a large lecture hall, …
Read Moreabout Education Matters: Active learning, Educause, and student skill levels
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by Doug Ward