Difference between revisions of "EDUC 6470 Final Project"
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*Measure impact by replies | *Measure impact by replies | ||
*Survey readers | *Survey readers | ||
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+ | ===Relationships between innovative teaching and innovative curriculum=== | ||
+ | ;Driving question:How can the powerful movement in innovative teaching be brought to help the movement in innovative curriculum? | ||
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+ | ;Questions | ||
+ | #What innovations in curriculum are documented? | ||
+ | #What innovations in teaching are documented? | ||
+ | #What innovations in teaching are closely linked to considerations of content? | ||
+ | #What innovations in teaching are specific to physics? | ||
+ | #What innovations in teaching are specific to science? | ||
+ | #What innovations in teaching are specific to my audiences? | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
See [[EDUC_6470_Week_10|Week 10]] notes on Donald French's 2006 paper. | See [[EDUC_6470_Week_10|Week 10]] notes on Donald French's 2006 paper. | ||
<bibreferences /> | <bibreferences /> |
Revision as of 11:57, 1 May 2010
For EDUC 6470, a project to examine innovative teaching, to search the literature, and to develop ideas.
Contents
Possible projects
What is important about the sequence of classes in a unit?
This semester I've been teaching electronics. I taught an 8 week class that included lessons normally put off until after "the basics" of electronic components were "presented." For the next 8 weeks I'm offering a components class that might be more recognizable as an introduction to the basics of electronics. Many students are taking both. Unstudied first arguments might be either of these opposites:
- Students who build circuits first before reviewing the basics of each component will be more motivated to learn the basics of each component.
- Students who build circuits first won't understand enough about each component to understand the circuit as a system of components.
I will examine these concerns as I teach the second course, and see if there's any literature on this subject of sequencing within a unit. I will build a concept map to examine my own "pedagogical content knowledge" and count chunks per meeting.
- Assessment
I've created a survey using Student Assessment of Learning Gains (s:14911,p:diode). I can use concept maps to assess students' development of concepts.
- Parallels
I like to draw parallels to teaching in non-science subjects. In this case, I can draw a parallel between the dichotomies of basics to contextualized understandings in both subjects. For example, in english, specifically poetry, we could call iambs, troches, and rhymes the basics, and creative writing and literary analysis of an epic poem the contextualized understandings.
- Related questions
- Should engineering be a part of K-12 science education, or treated separately, as in Massachusetts?
- Can we avoid mistakenly separating "applied science" from "pure science"? <bibref>Rowland:1883</bibref>
- Is the literature on sequencing only for long-term sequencing of concepts, as in Atlas of Science Literacy?
- Will this work have any translation to long-term sequencing, such as the sequencing of introductory undergraduate science?
Meta-study of PHYSLRNR
PHYSLRNR is an e-mail list for the education research group of the American Association of Physics Teachers.
- Questions
- What interests people on PHYSLRNR?
- Are my interests in curriculum change ever addressed on PHYSLRNR, any more or less than in other PER venues?
- How many people post on PHYSLRNR, how often?
- Are PHYSLRNR posts representative of the diversity of physics education research?
- Do new ideas appear on PHYSLRNR?
- Are readers affected by what is posted on PHYSLRNR, or is it merely a soapbox?
- Methods
- Count posts.
- Find and count keywords.
- Reiterate as we discover patterns.
- Measure impact by replies
- Survey readers
Relationships between innovative teaching and innovative curriculum
- Driving question
- How can the powerful movement in innovative teaching be brought to help the movement in innovative curriculum?
- Questions
- What innovations in curriculum are documented?
- What innovations in teaching are documented?
- What innovations in teaching are closely linked to considerations of content?
- What innovations in teaching are specific to physics?
- What innovations in teaching are specific to science?
- What innovations in teaching are specific to my audiences?
References
See Week 10 notes on Donald French's 2006 paper. <bibreferences />