Hey Jorden, Dan Robinson and I have implemented TBL in an introductory Educational Psychology course here at UT. Of course the content is not the same as your PSYC 100 class but it is similar enough that the issues you face may be similar. Application-oriented activities have been a tough nut for us to crack in that course. It is a survey course and it has been extremely difficult to come up with activities that go beyond simply identifying concepts in written scenarios. Of course, videos would be great and we are on the hunt for those, but finding ones that exemplify a concept "just so" has been tough. Arguably the best exercise we have come up with has been a concept-mapping exercise, where students must create an individual concept map at home, then come to class and integrate their concept map with those of their team-members. Teams draw their collective concept maps on large sheets of paper which are hung on the wall and then "gallery walk" and comment upon each other's work. (This assignment has been done by others and is not an original idea, but we have found it works for us.) It stimulates a great deal of thinking, arguing, and learning but--strictly speaking--it is still not an *application* exercise because it is still at a relatively high level of inference from the real setting in which the students will use the course material. Our students are mostly pre-service teachers and we just don't have closets-full of schoolchildren we can trot out for our students to "learn on." Oh, that pesky IRB. :-) One thing you may be able to use is a source of materials that I use when teaching group dynamics: Hollywood movies. For example, I used "Donnie Brasco" to dig into cultural norms, power relations and coalitions. You might be able to find good examples of the psychological constructs you are after at the video rental store. Not sure if it is within the scope of PSYC 100, but there are some great movies out there revolving around mental health: Mr. Jones (bipolarism), Instinct (Learned Helplessness/Depression), of course the Aviator (OCD), etc.. Hope some of this helps. -M Hope some of this ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jorden Cummings" <[log in to unmask]> To: <[log in to unmask]> Sent: Saturday, December 10, 2005 11:24 AM Subject: team based learning in PSYC 100 >I was wondering if anyone has ever taught PSYC 100 as a team-based > learning course and, if so, if anyone has examples of some team > activities/exercises? > Thanks, > > Jorden Cummings > Graduate Student, Clinical Psychology > 003 McKinly Lab > University of Delaware > Newark, DE 19716 > (302) 831-8188