Hi 

I would look up Richard Hake's stuff...

look up 1989a along with his name

he did some incredible studies in late 80's on active learning in the physics classroom....

the flipped classroom stuff has only been named that since 2000...it been around for a long time but not called "flipped"

you might look up Johnson and Johnson and some of their early work on cooperative learning

The whole social constructivist literature probably applies...wikipedia does a pretty good job of introducing those ideas....bandura especially has some things to say about the active social construction of knowledge

jim

From: Team-Based Learning [[log in to unmask]] on behalf of Fire, Nancy [[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Monday, March 02, 2015 9:52 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: origin of "active learning" concept

Much history of flipped classroom can be found at this site:  flipitconsulting.com

Especially see resources.  Nancy Fire

 

From: Team-Based Learning [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Daniel Moraga
Sent: Monday, March 02, 2015 11:29 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: origin of "active learning" concept

 

Hi there,

 

I am wonder if somebody can give some references of the origin of "active learning" concept, who introduce it for the first time. And also something about the origin of "flipped classroom".

 

Thanks

 

Daniel Moraga

TBL-consulting

in spanish countries

 


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