G'day Steve,

Imperial runs TBL lessons with a cohort with 420 students.

At the beginning they were running them in two classrooms, splitting the
same TBL learning design into each classroom running simultaneously.

However, the last time they ran a TBL lesson with this cohort, they decided
to run it with a single classroom all 420 in the same TBL about 6/7
students per team. The TBL lesson finished about 10 minutes later than the
previous ones (the ones where they were split in two).

While I wasn't in the room when they ran this, I wouldn't know about the
acoustics though. Will find out for you though.

Recently, Universidad de Chile ran a TBL (in Spanish) in a single room with
300+ students. I was in the room and while the classroom was not a TBL
classroom (rather a traditional auditorium type classroom), rather than the
noise, students complained more about the disposition of chairs (according
to the after session students' survey).

For reporting, we have implemented features
<https://docs.lamsfoundation.org/tbl/tbl-for-teachers/monitoring-a-tbl-lesson/tbl-monitor#burning-questions>
(see
likes) that allow teams to decide which challenges or burning questions
should be addressed first. So even before tRAT discussion happens, the
teams can tell the facilitator/content experts which one should be
addressed first. That pushes the prioritisation of conversation to
students, which works very well in keeping things on point and on track.

To prevent disengagement, with LKC medicine in Singapore we did a research
project where we implemented a quick and non-intrusive mini-survey (discussion
sentiment <https://vimeo.com/699120896#t=900s>) while clarification
sessions are happening at the tRAT or AEs that will let you know the
overall relevance of the discussion happening.

So I think you can make it work, just need to ensure that you have the
right systems in place to track engagement and reporting throughout all the
stages of the TBL lesson.

Thanks

Ernie



On Tue, 14 Jun 2022 at 15:33, Steve Cayzer <
[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> Hi TBLers
>
>
>
> I have been tasked with redesigning a 1st year undergraduate module in
> Engineering covering ‘responsible engineering practices’
>
>
>
> It’s a really great opportunity to get TBL embedded into the Engineering
> Syllabus.
>
> I have absolutely no problem thinking of great 4S activities (for example,
> ethical dilemmas in engineering practice) and am confident of designing a
> really compelling course.
>
>
>
> Where  I am slightly less confident is that this cohort is quite large –
> 350 students, probably 70 teams (personal tutor groups – hence slightly
> smaller than TBLC recommendation, I might push for 6 people as a default).
>
>
>
> Here are the challenges I am wondering about
>
>    - With 350 people in 1 (big) lecture hall, will the acoustics be
>    deafening when teams are working together?
>    - With only a fraction of teams being able to report back (due to
>    timing) during task debrief, will some teams start to disengage?
>
>
>
> Any tips for dealing with this would be welcome!
>
>
>
> Bw and thanks
>
>
>
> Steve
>
> PS and of course if anyone has delivered a similar course, would be
> interested to hear from you too
>
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