The practicum: see a few posts back, but it's basically "group quiz with a twist", namely, after the class does the group quiz together, one person selected at random has to get up in front of the class and explain how to do the quiz. The prize is no homework for the whole class.
This went surprisingly well, but not exactly as planned (surprise!). By treating the first part of class like a real quiz, with everyone working on a what looked exactly like a quiz sitting right in front of them, I think we really got everyone's attention -- in fact, despite my explanation I'm sure some students took a while to realize it wasn't a real quiz. The promise of no homework helped as always, which I still find shocking considering how few students turn in the homework anyway.
Nevertheless, I think that ten minutes of confronting a problem you have no idea how to do while the class is silent all around you can have an illuminating effect on the limits of your knowledge. One benefit of a practice quiz during class time is that you experience the sinking feeling you get from taking an exam you weren't prepared for, but before you've actually done any damage to your grade. Thus, sinking feeling of despair transforms into motivation, hopefully. A glimpse into the fiery depths, if you will, but with a chance for salvation immediately afterward.
Anyway, the first not-as-planned part came during what was supposed to be the self-teaching section. As it turned out, it ended up being more of one-on-one teacher-teaching, with little helpful student-student interaction. We rolled with this, though, and just devoted more time to helping everyone get their questions answered. In retrospect, I think I should have more actively encouraged the students I could see getting it to help their classmates.
Once George and I explained to everyone how to do the problems (without actually giving answers), the class voted on the answers to each problem. There were some disagreements on some problems, but the majority of the class that voted was usually right, and both 2nd and 4th hour were able to democratically arrive at all 5 correct answers.
There was also a lot of shyness in the second half of the practicum, where one person picked at random was supposed to come up and do the quiz on the overhead now that we'd gone over everything together and voted on the answers. I had a student pick a name from a hat at random in each class, and in one class that random person flat out refused to participate. It wasn't a belligerent thing, either, just an eyes-downcast, mumbling, embarrassed cop-out from a student who usually won't shut up! This was a good reminder of an important point. These kids try to act all tough and invincible and too-cool-for-anything, and it's all just as much of an act now as it was when I was their age -- with all that hard exterior they are just marshmallows inside!
I ended up taking volunteers in that class, one person for each of the five questions. Several students were really itching to get up there and show that they knew how to do the problem, and it's hard to refuse that kind of enthusiasm.
So, all in all it wasn't a disaster in terms of people bouncing off the walls or hanging from the ceiling. But did it work? Was it worth doing this versus the usual pre-quiz review of similar problems on the board?
By the numbers, correcting for students who missed the Thursday practicum and students who did not take the quiz at all, class averages were up slightly (about 0.5-1 points out of 15 total) compared to the most recent quiz. Now, is that meaningful? Perhaps the subject matter was just easier that week than it had been the week before. This would be a good problem for the stats classes in 1st and 3rd hour, but I think the answer would come down to insufficient data to draw a statistically significant conclusion.
Anecdotally, yeah, it was seemed like it was working. George and I talk a lot about what I should try to bring to the classroom, whether I'm presenting, just sitting in and helping out, or planning an activity and teaching like this. We've come to a conclusion that one of the most important things I can do is shake up the routine that the students are used to. If they're used to coming in and tuning out because they know what's coming and they don't like it, then anything I can do to rattle their cages and get them engaged in something new is worth it. And, judging by the increased attention span during the practicum relative to their usual quiz review, I'd say that's about right.
9 years ago
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