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From:
Sandy Cook <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Sandy Cook <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 12 Sep 2015 01:54:47 +0000
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Dear Neil,



My questions to you are:





1.      Have you prepared the students about what the process is – and that it may in fact be the first time in their lives that their individual work and typical study patterns may not give them the clarity they need – but the learning continues in the TRAT?



2.      Are your RAT questions clear recall or higher order (and the students need to understand that difference).  If straight recall, too easy, and they did well – there would be little to discuss with team.



3.      Have you reviewed your study guide – to make sure that it is clear to the students what to study



4.      Most importantly – do you have meaningful application questions that allows the students to apply the information in the RAT (and the other things they have studied) so they get to use/apply what they learned (IRAT & TRAT) – so they can see the value?



5.      What is your grading element for this?



RATs without application and high weightage to IRAT can be discouraging.  But it takes time for them to appreciate the learning that comes.









********************************************************

Sandy COOK, PhD | Senior Associate Dean, |

Medical Education, Research, and Evaluation (MERE) Department |

Office of Education |

Academic Medicine Education Institute (AM.EI)

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From: Team-Based Learning [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Neil Haave

Sent: Thursday, September 10, 2015 11:05 PM

To: [log in to unmask]

Subject: first RAT of the term



First the context: this is a first year course for majors and non-majors in biological function. Most of the students are either majoring in biology or intending to enter a professional program in the health sciences.



My question: How have people on this list handled the huge disappointment that happens with the first RAT of the first term in freshman courses?



This is typically students' very first university quiz as I start right after the first week of setting up the course structure with the first TBL module. This past weekend I gave students their reading assignment complete with reading guide (key objectives and keywords matched to the pages and figure numbers in the text book). Then they wrote their first RAT yesterday. I received fairly typical results I think except that the iRAT score were lower then I had hoped.



[Inline images 1]



[Inline images 2]



It breaks my heart when I hear stories from students during the tRAT and after class that they studied 10-15 hrs and made 10-15 pages of notes over the long weekend only to receive an iRAT mark of 2/10. They had such energy at the start of the term last week. Now I think I have killed it.

How do the rest of you manage this sort of disappointment and help students regain their spirit for learning (and mine for teaching!)? I suspect the issue is that many of these excellent students (and I have no doubt they achieved excellence in high school) simply were able to excel in high school without developing good study, reading, and note-taking skills. I have a couple of excellent senior students who will be coming into class tomorrow to explain how they read and take notes. I hope that helps.

I would love to hear the collective wisdom of the TBLC.

Thanks very much.

Neil



Neil Haave, PhD

Associate Professor, Biology

Managing Editor, CELT<http://celt.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/CELT/index>

Vice-President, AIBA<http://www2.mtroyal.ca/~tnickle/AIBA/AIBA_website/AIBA.html>

Faculty Affiliate, CTL<http://uofa.ualberta.ca/centre-for-teaching-and-learning/about-ctl/people/faculty-affiliates>

McCalla Professor<http://uofa.ualberta.ca/centre-for-teaching-and-learning/awards/mccalla-professorships>



University of Alberta, Augustana Faculty

Rm C155, Science Wing, Classroom Building, Augustana Campus

4901 - 46 Avenue, Camrose, AB, CANADA   T4V 2R3



email<mailto:[log in to unmask]> | Augustana dossier<http://www.augustana.ualberta.ca/profs/nhaave/> | Google+<https://www.google.com/+NeilHaave> | blog<http://activelylearning2teach.blogspot.ca/> | Twitter<https://twitter.com/nhaave> | LinkedIn<https://ca.linkedin.com/in/neilhaave>



"We do not learn from experience . . . we learn from reflecting on experience" - John Dewey



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