Great idea! I will definitely use this in my business ethics class. 

My own approach has been to start the term by watching and critiquing together the ideas in the RSA Animation: Changing Education Paradigms by Sir Ken Robinson.  Now I have an exercise for the end of term as well. 

Thank you for sharing.

-Tom


Dr. Tom Brown
Beedie School of Business


On Sep 18, 2014, at 8:07 AM, Nofziger,Stacey <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

HI all,
One thing I did just BEFORE official evaluations was to have them to an application called “What have I learned”  They first looked at a list of terms / ideas  that I thought were important and circled ones that they did not really feel like they understood.  Then in teams the compared the lists and explained ideas to each other that they personally understood.  Finally, they starred any ideas they still did not understand as a group and we discussed those as a full class.  Out of a list of 60+ ideas, only about 2 were left as not being understood by the end of the day.  This I felt was a great way to remind them that even though they did not have a notebook full of notes, they still learned a lot!
 
I have attached what I did – I am in sociology and it was a Juvenile Delinquency class.
 
Stacey
 
 
Dr. Stacey Nofziger
Graduate Director and Associate Professor
 
Department of Sociology
Olin Hall 247
University of Akron
Akron, OH 44325-1905
 
330-972-5364
 
 
 
From: Team-Based Learning [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Ostebo,Marit
Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2014 10:50 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Applications
 
Hi Neil,
You have some very good points, - I have also been thinking that I should be careful to draw conclusions. I have also thought of doing some kind of midterm evaluation in order to get a sense of what the students are thinking, and use that evaluation to make improvements. I have talked to other professors who say that they tend to get better evaluations when they engage the students in a midterm review of the course.
 
Maybe there are other out there who have some advice on this?
Marit
 
From: Neil Haave [mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2014 10:38 AM
To: Ostebo,Marit
Cc: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Applications
 
Hi Marit,
 
I will be curious if your experience will be the same as mine....  I too have had the experience of implementing TBL and being so pleased with the results as I witnessed them in the classroom: engaged discussion occurring whereas before TBL there was passive silence. However, when the end of term course evaluations were returned to me, I was surprised at the number of students who had a very negative reaction to the teaching & learning strategy that is TBL. They were a minority, but a significant minority. It felt to me like a bit of cognitive dissonance was going on for students - they didn't recognize the learning experience for what it was. On my campus it really feels like implementing TBL is counter-cultural in the sense that students have experienced and expect didactic lecture and to not do the same is to abdicate my instructor responsibilities.
 
I have a lot of work to do in not only teaching my students the course content, but also how to learn deeply so that their education lasts longer than their degree program...
 
Cheers
 
Neil

Neil Haave, PhD
Associate Professor, Biology
University of Alberta, Augustana Faculty
Rm C155, Science Wing, Classroom Building, Augustana Campus
4901 - 46 Avenue, Camrose, AB, CANADA   T4V 2R3
 
"We do not learn from experience . . . we learn from reflecting on experience" - John Dewey
 
On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 7:40 AM, Ostebo,Marit <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
I am implementing TBL for the first time this semester. It seems to work very well (judging from the high level of participation in the class and the good feeling I have when leaving the classroom). I teach a Human Rights and Culture class, and I just wonder if there are people out there who have been teaching similar classes and who would like to share their applications with me. Topics that I cover are e.g.  Violence, conflict resolution and legal pluralism,  Women’s Rights and Gender Equality, Human Rights activism, Anthropology and Human rights, Human rights and International Development +++
 
A few weeks back I had a focus on dignity, and the applications I had designed worked EXTREMELY well. If anyone is interested, - I am happy to share. It should be of relevance not only for those teaching human rights, but also for instructors in nursing, medicine, ethics, etc.
 
Please shoot me an e-mail off list if you are interested: [log in to unmask]
 
Marit Ostebo
 
 
 
 
 
Marit Tolo Ostebo (PhD)
Lecturer
Department of Anthropology
Address:
427 Grinter Hall – PO BOX 115560
Gainesville, FL 32611-5560
 
 
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<What have I learned.docx>