"Flipped Learning" class model

WhiteBear

Jedi Master
I saw this article and thought, "Damn, I wish we'd done this back in the day"...not that we had the tech, but it still seems like the first good idea in education I've seen in a while.

_http://my.earthlink.net/article/us?guid=20130127/afb789dd-0743-49c5-8d10-fc42b9b65252

Teachers flip for 'flipped learning' class model
By CHRISTINA HOAG
From Associated Press
January 27, 2013 6:38 PM EST

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — When Timmy Nguyen comes to his pre-calculus class, he's already learned the day's lesson — he watched it on a short online video prepared by his teacher for homework.

So without a lecture to listen to, he and his classmates at Segerstrom Fundamental High School spend class time doing practice problems in small groups, taking quizzes, explaining the concept to other students, reciting equation formulas in a loud chorus, and making their own videos while teacher Crystal Kirch buzzes from desk to desk to help pupils who are having trouble.

It's a technology-driven teaching method known as "flipped learning" because it flips the time-honored model of classroom lecture and exercises for homework — the lecture becomes homework and class time is for practice.

"It was hard to get used to," said Nguyen, an 11th-grader. "I was like 'why do I have to watch these videos, this is so dumb.' But then I stopped complaining and I learned the material quicker. My grade went from a D to an A."

Flipped learning apparently is catching on in schools across the nation as a younger, more tech-savvy generation of teachers is moving into classrooms. Although the number of "flipped" teachers is hard to ascertain, the online community Flipped Learning Network now has 10,000 members, up from 2,500 a year ago, and training workshops are being held all over the country, said executive director Kari Afstrom.

Under the model, teachers make eight- to 10-minute videos of their lessons using laptops, often simply filming the whiteboard as the teacher makes notations and recording their voice as they explain the concept. The videos are uploaded onto a teacher or school website, or even YouTube, where they can be accessed by students on computers or smartphones as homework.

For pupils lacking easy access to the Internet, teachers copy videos onto DVDs or flash drives. Kids with no home device watch the video on school computers.

Class time is then devoted to practical applications of the lesson — often more creative exercises designed to engage students and deepen their understanding. On a recent afternoon, Kirch's students stood in pairs with one student forming a cone shape with her hands and the other angling an arm so the "cone" was cut into different sections.

"It's a huge transformation," said Kirch, who has been taking this approach for two years. "It's a student-focused classroom where the responsibility for learning has flipped from me to the students."

The concept emerged five years ago when a pair of Colorado high school teachers started videotaping their chemistry classes for absent students.

"We found it was really valuable and pushed us to ask what the students needed us for," said one of the teachers, Aaron Sams, now a consultant who is developing on online education program in Pittsburgh. "They didn't need us for content dissemination, they needed us to dig deeper."

He and colleague Jonathan Bergmann began condensing classroom lectures to short videos and assigning them as homework.

"The first year, I was able to double the number of labs my students were doing," Sams said. "That's every science teacher's dream."

In the Detroit suburb of Clinton Township, Clintondale High School Principal Greg Green converted the whole school to flipped learning in the fall of 2011 after years of frustration with high failure rates and discipline problems. Three-quarters of the school's enrollment of 600 is low-income, minority students.

Flipping yielded dramatic results after just a year, including a 33 percent drop in the freshman failure rate and a 66 percent drop in the number of disciplinary incidents from the year before, Green said. Graduation, attendance and test scores all went up. Parent complaints dropped from 200 to seven.

Green attributed the improvements to an approach that engages students more in their classes.

"Kids want to take an active part in the learning process," he said. "Now teachers are actually working with kids."

Although the method has been more popular in high schools, it's now catching on in elementary schools, said Afstrom of the Flipped Learning Network.

Fifth-grade teacher Lisa Highfill in the Pleasanton Unified School District said for a lesson about adding decimals, she made a five-minute, how-to video kids watched at home and in class, then she distributed play money and menus and had kids "ordering" food and tallying the bill and change.

A colleague who teaches kindergarten reads a storybook on video. The video contains a pop-up box that requires kids to write something that shows they understood the story.

The concept has its downside. Teachers note that making the videos and coming up with project activities to fill class time is a lot of extra work up front, while some detractors believe it smacks of teachers abandoning their primary responsibility of instructing.

"They're expecting kids to do the learning outside the classroom. There's not a lot of evidence this works," said Leonie Haimson, executive director of Class Size Matters, a New York City-based parent advocacy group. "What works is reasonably sized classes with a lot of debate, interaction and discussion."

Others question whether flipped learning would work as well with low achieving students, who may not be as motivated to watch lessons on their own, but said it was overall a positive model.

"It's forcing the notion of guided practice," said Cynthia Desrochers, director of the Center for Excellence in Learning and Teaching at California State University-Northridge. "Students can get the easy stuff on their own, but the hard stuff should be under the watchful eye of a teacher."

At Michigan's Clintondale High School, some teachers show the video at the beginning of class to ensure all kids watch it and that home access is not an issue.

In Kirch's pre-calculus class, students said they liked the concept.

"You're not falling asleep in class, "said senior Monica Resendiz said. "You're constantly working."

Explaining to adults that homework was watching videos was a little harder, though.

"My grandma thought I was using it as an excuse to mess around on the Internet," Nguyen said.
 
"They're expecting kids to do the learning outside the classroom. There's not a lot of evidence this works," said Leonie Haimson, executive director of Class Size Matters, a New York City-based parent advocacy group. "What works is reasonably sized classes with a lot of debate, interaction and discussion."

?????! :jawdrop: Possibly the most ridiculous statement to ever come out of an "education advocate's" mouth.

True education is learning to how to learn, as mastering new skills and knowledge is a lifelong task. 'Flipped learning' sounds engaging, fun, and does appear to be working. I hope more schools try it out.
 
herondancer said:
"They're expecting kids to do the learning outside the classroom. There's not a lot of evidence this works," said Leonie Haimson, executive director of Class Size Matters, a New York City-based parent advocacy group. "What works is reasonably sized classes with a lot of debate, interaction and discussion."

?????! :jawdrop: Possibly the most ridiculous statement to ever come out of an "education advocate's" mouth.

True education is learning to how to learn, as mastering new skills and knowledge is a lifelong task. 'Flipped learning' sounds engaging, fun, and does appear to be working. I hope more schools try it out.

Sounds like she's a schooling advocate, not an education advocate. Does she even know what learning is? They're learning in the classroom and at home, while sharing the hardest parts together in school. And who's to say there's not a lot of debate, interaction and discussion in a classroom where everyone's learning together and sharing ideas? Sheesh!! I bet parents are thrilled not having to spend hours doing homework with their burnt out kids too!
 
I would not be so quick to judge Leonie Haimson; she's fought for school justice for years; she been fighting TeBloomberg, The Education (Destroyer) mayor for almost 12 years, and her organization, Class Size Matters, is one of the very few that have been able to put a ballot initiative on the NYC ballot.

Technology is great if everyone has access to it, but in NYC there are lots of lots of homeless kids who are living in shelters. If their parents don't return to the shelter by a certain time, they lose their accomodations, have to go through a long process to find a new place which is often several train or bus rides from their new school, which is often overcrowded, underfunded, and evaluated each year for an increase or decrease in the percent of students who go up on standardized tests.

NYC won a court case years ago which, if I remember correctly, was about one billion dollars. That money never reached the schools where it was supposed to be spent to lower class size by hiring more teachers. Of course Bloomie doesn't want more teachers so he got his way and the money was spent on other mayoral priorities such as destroying the system completely and privatizing it.

Large class sizes mean less time for teachers to interact one on one with their students, means an increase in the number of homeworks that have to be corrected; when I was teaching I had 175 students a day most of whom showed up and did the homework I assigned every night. I basically had no life. So to ask teachers to make videos every nightdespite the incredible pressure that they are under is just criminal. To assume that homeless kids are going to watch those videos is just flying in the face of reality.

The schools in NYC are being dismantled one by one; it is not unusual to find videos in my inbox in which students and teachers are protesting in front of Department of Education Headquarters to beg the PTB to not close their schools.

Leonie is one of my heroes. She has never given the fight, and has worked consistently and tirelessly for the students and teachers of NYC, and as far as I know, she is still fighting.
 
'Flipped classroom' seem great in that the student receives more time to self (considerable homework reduction) but also gets to sleep on the newly introduced concepts and thus is at much better odds in actually attaining understanding and interest towards the class experiments.

webglider said:
I would not be so quick to judge Leonie Haimson; she's fought for school justice for years; she been fighting TeBloomberg, The Education (Destroyer) mayor for almost 12 years, and her organization, Class Size Matters, is one of the very few that have been able to put a ballot initiative on the NYC ballot.

Off the bat it seems Haimson is advocating justice for a classical school system, within the confines of the prussian modelled school system. It could appear that she is not aware of all the negative programs being installed through this. Sure class size matters but it's still a deceptive system no matter how many attends and gets attention, which is not to say smaller classes wouldn't be a step in a better direction. As I understand it a flipped classroom seems all in all a greater step forward, working in favour of both the students learning and freetime and better time management for the teacher (there may be some transition difficulties).

webglider said:
Large class sizes mean less time for teachers to interact one on one with their students, means an increase in the number of homeworks that have to be corrected; when I was teaching I had 175 students a day most of whom showed up and did the homework I assigned every night. I basically had no life. So to ask teachers to make videos every nightdespite the incredible pressure that they are under is just criminal. To assume that homeless kids are going to watch those videos is just flying in the face of reality.

It seems from the 'flipped classroom' design that homework is diminished, for both teacher and student. A smaller online response does not seem like too burdensome work (in comparison to old system) to either write for the student or correct for the teacher. The real homework is then being exchanged by the experimental work done in class. Which theoretically should unburden the teacher and thus make room for a video recording. It's being proposed (which may be far from realistic) that children from homeless and financialy troubled families can do their video assignment on school premises or other public facility after school hours. There may be all sorts of problems with this but I don't see how it directly 'flies in the face of reality'?

I am not a teacher and cannot really imagine the horrors of the proffession ( which I recognize are wall to wall in pressure) but on the outside it seems that despite all the budget cuts and disrespect they receive from boards and government, the new revolutionary school designs such as 'flippped classroom' may or can be working in favour of their true calling of transmitting knowledge, with the added benefit of lessened time burden. These tendecies will no doubt be put to the test by pathocrats, but still the posibility is promising, OSIT.

A 'flipped classroom' related thread : http://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php/topic,26264.msg324974.html#msg324974
 
quote from Dagobah Resident:

I am not a teacher and cannot really imagine the horrors of the proffession ( which I recognize are wall to wall in pressure) but on the outside it seems that despite all the budget cuts and disrespect they receive from boards and government, the new revolutionary school designs such as 'flippped classroom' may or can be working in favour of their true calling of transmitting knowledge, with the added benefit of lessened time burden. These tendecies will no doubt be put to the test by pathocrats, but still the posibility is promising, OSIT.

A 'flipped classroom' related thread : http://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php/topic,26264.msg324974.html#msg324974

Thank you so much for the link: I started watching it and then looked up his youtube lessons which I plan on using to fill in the gaps in my math which are infinitely many. I can definitely see the use of this technique and think it's a good idea for those students who would actually be motivated enough and/or have the financial means to make use of it - not every student has access to a computer.

And there are some awful programs out there in addition to the really good ones. After I retired, I worked for a semester as an assistant to a former colleague mandated to use a computer program to teach reading. The program adjusted the reading levels of articles taken from the Associated Press and rewrote them so that the difficulty of the article could be geared to specific reading levels. There was no discussion or followup except for some multiple choice questions.

Some of the students spent their time pulling the keys off the computers. Others, finding that the reading level became harder as the level went up deliberately chose the wrong answers so that they didn't have to work so hard.

It was incredibly boring, condescending and soul killing. I only lasted one semester and never went back. So when I hear of innovative computer programs, I'm skeptical, but the one in this thread seems okay.
 
Thanks, WhiteBear, this was an interesting idea. I can see the concept working in some cases, but I agree that doing it more continuously would maybe make us teachers even more stressed. But on the other hand, I'm all in favor of DOING in the classroom, instead of lecturing. I've applied this principle more and more in my music teaching, and I've found e.g. the Dalcroze-eurhythmics an excellent way to activate the students and get them to internalize music and rhythm.

Just thinking out loud here, but maybe making short video clips with basics in guitar, piano, music theory, and even breathing (there's the EE videos !) - and then require them to watch them prior to each lesson could work. We have such short one-on-one singing and playing sessions in the teachers' education, that this could save some valuable time. I think I need to try this! :)

As a side note, did you know that Mme Salzmann was a student of Dalcroze (at Hellerau, where she met her husband) and later taught dance and rhythm inspired by his teachings? Okay, I seem to digress...
 

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