A Think-Pair-Share exercise is a great, easy tool for getting students to make connections between assigned readings and what you focus on in class that day. You're giving individual students space to reflect on their learning, discuss the topic with a few classmates, and then practice sharing with the larger class.
Think |
Pair |
Share |
Optional: After the students have paired up, you can have them form small groups prior to reporting back to the whole class.
The Chronicle of Higher Education's article by George Williams on The Simplicity of "Think-Pair-Share" is a quick read to help you get started.
Engaging Students in Large (and Small) Classes: The Peer Instruction Method presentation describes a study at University of Colorado, Boulder. They used clickers to collect responses. It isn't quite as open-ended in terms of the students' answers, but it does students an opportunity to explore their individual rationale.
The Think-Pair-Share page from the Science Education Resource Center at Carleton College provides a list of advantages, challenges, examples, and further reading.
The Minute Paper is an easy approach to formative assessment, both in-class and online. It provides rapid feedback on whether students understand the concepts and which areas need further learning. When your students reflect and write their responses, they are actively engaging in the content, and that enhances their long-term learning transfer. Minute papers are low-stakes - not graded. However, some faculty use the Minute Paper to assess points for participation. Reading these should be fast too, about four papers per minute!
Face-to-Face
On a piece of paper (or an index card supplied by you), ask students to respond in writing to the following questions:
The important guideline is that they have one minute to complete this.
Tip: Tell students at the beginning of class that they will be doing this exercise.
In this version consider giving your students one to five minutes depending upon your approach to the questions.
The Center for the Enhancement of Learning & Teaching at Tufts University has prepared a handout on this strategy. In this handout, you will find sample instructions: https://homepages.math.uic.edu/%7Ebshipley/MinutePaper.pdf.
UCF's Dr. Kelvin Thompson adapts the one minute paper idea for collecting formative feedback from students in his online graduate course in educational technology.
Classroom Assessment Technique: Muddiest Point (video + transcript) https://pandora.cii.wwu.edu/cii/resources/modules/muddiestpoint/ This is the simplest version of one-minute paper. Minute papers work well with large lower-division courses.
Angelo, T. A., & Cross, K.P. (1993) Classroom Techniques: A Handbook for College Teachers, Second Edition. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Retrieved from https://endeavor.flo.org/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=385295
A Jigsaw Discussion is a fun and active group organization model that supports peer teaching and cooperative learning. Using this student-centered approach, each student studies the topic materials. Then, they work in groups to share ideas, debate different views and teach each other. Plus, jigsaw discussions can be assessed in a variety of ways to suit your teaching style and your students' needs.
Optional: For a quick assessment, have your students take a short quiz before they join their expert groups to check for individual understanding.
Amador, J.A. & Mederer, H. (2013). Migrating successful student engagement strategies online: Opportunities and challenges using jigsaw groups and problem-based learning. Journal of Online Learning and Teaching, 9(1). Retrieved from https://jolt.merlot.org/vol9no1/amador_0313.htm
Gonzalez, J. (2016, April 15). The jigsaw method. [Video file].
Schreyer Institute for Teaching Excellence. (2007). Jigsaw strategy. Retrieved from https://www.schreyerinstitute.psu.edu/pdf/alex/jigsaw.pdf
Project-Based Learning is a highly immersive student-centered approach the allows students extended time, often over the entire semester, to investigate an authentic problem or question while developing knowledge and skills. The project culminates in sharing their information with a "real-world" audience through a final presentation, video, or report for example.
* It's also important to know that project-based learning and problem-based learning are not the same.
What’s the Difference Between “Doing Projects” and “Project-Based Learning”? summary illustrates project-based learning.
Project-Based Learning 7-Phase Model and The 7 Essentials is a handy infographic the highlights the features of designing the project and provides the rationale.
Essential Project Design Elements Checklist is a quick tool to guide you as your develop your teaching plan for the project.
Project-Based Learning vs Problem-Based Learning explains the differences between the two.
Reflective Learning Journal Teacher Guide (MS Word document, automatically downloads.)
From UNSW Sydney, Examples of Reflective Writing. Types of reflective writing assignments log vs journal vs diary vs self-assessment etc.
Tomasek,T. (2009). Critical reading: Using reading prompts to promote active engagement with text. International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 21 (1), 127-132. https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ896252.pdf.
Discussion Synthesis Papersintegrate and connect online or face-to-face student discussions with course papers and projects. Student use their classmates’ research or experiential discussion posts as evidence for their arguments when writing papers. This is a little different than the traditional discussion forums – use them as a collection point for the students’ responses.
Coffin, Caroline, et al.(2005). Teaching academic writing: A toolkit for higher education. London: Routledge.
The Fishbowl Discussion is a teaching strategy that encourages full student participation, reflection and depth of knowledge. Students take turns "in the bowl" and "out of the bowl". Students in the bowl participate in a lively discussion, often about opposing views or controversial topics, Students outside of the bowl listen and reflect on the alternative viewpoints. And then...they switch!
In Class:
Online:
The Art and Science of Successful Online Discussions This is not specific to student-led discussions, but it provides a good explanation of the reasons for discussions. This can help students understand the purpose.
Group & Cooperative Learning; Students as Classroom Leaders This resource from Harvard Graduate School of Education explains the benefits using academic citations.
The Fishbowl from Edutopia This handout provides clear and specific instructions on the structure of the discussion question, the expectations for the students in the fishbowl and for those who are the observers on the outside the fishbowl.
Active Learning Strategies: Fishbowl Discussion from Baruch College This resource describes some alternate ways of using the fishbowl strategy.
A Student-Led Discussion is student-centered learning activity. Students are assigned or self-select the role of discussion leader each week. They pose the questions and guide the discussion. Your student leaders are likely to share examples that are more relevant to their classmates' experiences. This form of social learning encourages student participation and response and can be used in the classroom and online.
The Art and Science of Successful Online Discussions This is not specific to student-led discussions, but it provides a good explanation of the reasons for discussions. This can help students understand the purpose.
Group & Cooperative Learning; Students as Classroom Leaders This resource from Harvard Graduate School of Education explains the benefits using academic citations.
Online Discussion Forums are one of the most commonly used teaching tools in online teaching. Use them for personal introductions, consensus building, or managing group projects. It is a place for students to post their responses to question prompts, share their reflections on the course content, reply to each other, and contribute to in-depth learning.
From Iowa University of Michigan's Center for Research on Learning and Teaching.
Information source : Online Discussions. Center for Research on Learning and Teaching, University of Michigan
Teacher Stream’s Mastering Online Discussion Board Facilitation Resource Guide (2006) describes how discussion boards fit into active learning and offers excellent facilitation techniques (although it includes information for K12 teaching, it is very relevant to college students) (PDF)
Online Discussion Boards: Strategies to Ease Instructor Burden and Promote Student Learning from the Online Learning Consortium gives examples of the types of comments faculty might use to guide the discussions. It also lists recommendations on enriching the discussions.
Sample Discussion Board Questions That Work offers examples and explanations of why those examples are effective. (PDF)
Designing Online Discussions: Key Questions from the Sheridan Center for Teaching and Learning at Brown walks instructors through setting your discussion goals, writing the prompts, facilitating, and assessing.
How Can I Facilitate Online Discussions? describes a different approach to designing online discussion forums. The recommendations support discussion forums that more closely resemble the flow of conversation in the synchronous environment of a classroom or webinar. This link is to a blog post of an excerpt from Torria Davis' book, Visual Design for Online Learning.