Higher Education Teaching and Learning
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Higher Education Teaching and Learning
Issues and priorities arising around academic development, teaching and learning in Higher Education.
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A seriously brief - and somewhat provocative - history of lectures. - twitter feed

A seriously brief - and somewhat provocative - history of lectures.
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Face-to-face lectures aren’t dead!

Face-to-face lectures aren’t dead! | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
I often hear and read about how essential it is to offer students choice in how they consume lectures. The argument states that in modern higher education settings choice is everything: students should have a choice to either watch lectures live in a face-to-face setting, or to watch them live-streamed on a device from anywhere…
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Nancy Duarte: The secret structure of great talks

From the "I have a dream" speech to Steve Jobs' iPhone launch, many great talks have a common structure that helps their message resonate with listeners. In this talk, presentation expert Nancy Duarte shares practical lessons on how to make a powerful call-to-action.
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Link thanks to Teri O'dowd.
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COVID killed the on-campus lecture, but will unis raise it from the dead?

COVID killed the on-campus lecture, but will unis raise it from the dead? | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
About two-thirds of Australian universities won't be offering on-campus lectures in 2021. But that's not all the pandemic's fault – it simply accelerated a shift away from the traditional format.
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Remote Learning Begs the Question: Must Lectures Be So Long?

Remote Learning Begs the Question: Must Lectures Be So Long? | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
With some schools already announcing they will not reopen normally in the fall, and many others considering their options, educators are hoping to take advantage of the summer to improve on this spring’s sink-or-swim plunge into distance learning. Much of this reflection is likely to take place within the often siloed communities of practice in K-12 and higher education.

One source for insights on how to proceed is the cross-pollination that takes place when educators working in separate spheres learn from one another. Insights that derive from dialog between K-12, higher education, and online-learning providers could well shape instructional practices for the better as students return to school, whether in a classroom or over Zoom.

In my 2014 book “MOOCS Essentials,” I reflected on each aspect of the residential learning process and how developers of massive open online courses were trying to replicate those experiences virtually, or come up with ways to keep students engaged without direct teacher-student interaction. This was followed by a stint helping to create a new graduate school of education that required understanding the job of a K-12 teacher well enough to create a set of teachable and measurable competencies that would undergird a competency-based teacher-education program.

From these experiences, it became clear that every aspect of education could benefit from sharing of experience and expertise across educational sectors.

What’s the Use of Lectures?
For many, the recent leap to remote instruction felt rushed, chaotic and disorganized. Many things did not translate well online. Yet that discomfort also raises opportunities to question prevailing assumptions about how teaching and learning occurs. Let’s start with one of education’s most hallowed traditions: the lecture.

In his 1971 book “What’s the Use of Lectures?,” author Donald Bligh compared the four things teachers claimed students would get from lectures (acquisition of information, promotion of thought, changes in attitude, and development of behavior skills) with what his research showed pupils actually gained: only acquisition of information.
Peter Mellow's insight:
I still rate 'Reassessing the Value of University Lectures' by Sarah French and Gregor Kennedy (2015) as one of the best discussions around lectures.

Brenda VanDenBerg's curator insight, September 19, 2020 3:55 PM
Lecture in learning, do we need them?  If indeed, we do need them, how long do they need to be.  Will online replace lecturing or will lecturing evolve to fit the new online learning platform?
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Students Learn More With Active Learning, Despite Preferring Lectures

Students Learn More With Active Learning, Despite Preferring Lectures | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
A study reveals students prefer low-effort learning strategies—like listening to lectures—despite doing better with active learning.
Peter Mellow's insight:
I still rate 'Reassessing the Value of University Lectures' by Sarah French and Gregor Kennedy (2015) as one of the best discussions around lectures. https://melbourne-cshe.unimelb.edu.au/resources/categories/occasional-papers/reassessing-the-value-of-university-lectures
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The end of lectures?

The end of lectures? | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
The research in learning and teaching shows clearly that didactic teaching and passive reception d
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I still rate 'Reassessing the Value of University Lectures' by Sarah French and Gregor Kennedy (2015) as one of the best discussions around lectures. 

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Unpacking the Student Experience in Large Lectures

Unpacking the Student Experience in Large Lectures | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
Instructional designers at CU Boulder researched the student experience in large lectures and used their findings to develop recommendations to improv
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University professors lament empty lecture halls

University professors lament empty lecture halls | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
University lecturers have taken to social media to share their frustration at how lecturing nearly-empty halls has become their new normal.
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UTAS explains why it's moving away from face-to-face lectures

UTAS explains why it's moving away from face-to-face lectures | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
The University of Tasmania is moving all its lectures online, and some students aren't happy about it.
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IS THE LECTURE DEAD?

IS THE LECTURE DEAD? | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
The Australian National University’s vice-chancellor Brian Schmidt told staff last week:: “We need our teachers to be more than just people who stand at the front of the lecture hall or before a video camera. We need them to connect with their students in richer ways. This might include fewer lectures, and those that we do deliver, will be memorable and sophisticated, utilising technology.”
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Reassessing the Value of University Lectures

Reassessing the Value of University Lectures | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it

I still rate 'Reassessing the Value of University Lectures' by Sarah French and Gregor Kennedy (2015) as one of the best discussions around lectures.

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Remote Learning Begs the Question: Must Lectures Be So Long? By @DegreeofFree

Remote Learning Begs the Question: Must Lectures Be So Long? By @DegreeofFree | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
With some schools already announcing they will not reopen normally in the fall, and many others considering their options, educators are hoping to tak
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Link thanks to @glynnmark
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Ways to introduce and frame a lecture course that can enhance student-centered learning (opinion)

Ways to introduce and frame a lecture course that can enhance student-centered learning (opinion) | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
Cathy N. Davidson suggests some easy yet constructive ways to introduce and frame a course that can enhance student-centered learning.
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TimesHigherEducation on Twitter: "The lecture and current classroom set up is at war with the way our brains have evolved, argues @DavidJHelfand #TeachingEx… https://t.co/A9ye64GuRd"

Lecture Learning?
Peter Mellow's insight:
I don't totally agree with this. When I hear the evolution argument it reminds me of paleo diet people who say we should eat like hunter/collectors & throw out the stoves/ovens. Social learning 100% yes, but the lecture is not mutually exclusive IMHO.
Peter Mellow's curator insight, June 6, 2019 6:27 PM
I don't totally agree with this. When I hear the evolution argument it reminds me of paleo diet people who say we should eat like hunter/collectors & throw out the stoves/ovens. Social learning 100% yes, but the lecture is not mutually exclusive IMHO.
Peter Mellow's curator insight, June 6, 2019 6:36 PM
I don't totally agree with this. When I hear the evolution argument it reminds me of paleo diet people who say we should eat like hunter/collectors & throw out the stoves/ovens. Social learning 100% yes, but the lecture is not mutually exclusive IMHO.
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Massive Study Finds Lectures Still Dominate STEM Education

Massive Study Finds Lectures Still Dominate STEM Education | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
One potential culprit captured by the study: Faculty may lack the training necessary to take advantage of smaller class sizes, open classroom layouts and other strategies meant to reduce the reliance on conventional lecturing. Lectures did occur less often in smaller than larger classes, the study found, and open layouts did correlate with more student-centered learning. But about half of the courses with those advantages still featured more conventional lecturing than interactive or student-centered teaching styles.

Via Pauline Farrell
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