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Classroom practices can be reliably classified using lecture recordings

Authors :
George Kinnear
Steph Smith
Ross Anderson
Thomas Gant
Jill R D MacKay
Pamela Docherty
Susan Rhind
Ross Galloway
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Center for Open Science, 2020.

Abstract

Lectures are a commonly used teaching method in higher education, but there is significant debate about the relative merits of different classroom practices. Various classroom observation tools have been developed to try to give insight into these practices, beyond the simple dichotomy of “traditional lecturing versus active learning”. Here we review of a selection of classroom observation protocols from an ethological perspective, and describe how this informed the development of a new protocol, FILL+. We demonstrate that FILL+ can be applied reliably by undergraduate students after minimal training. We analysed a sample of 208 lecture recordings from Mathematics, Physics, and Veterinary Medicine and found a wide variety of classroom practices, e.g. on average lecturers spent 2.1% (±2.6%) of the time asking questions, and 79.3% (±19%) of the lecture talking, but individuals varied considerably. The FILL+ protocol has the potential to be widely used, both in research on effective teaching practices, and in informing discussion of pedagogical approaches within institutions and disciplines.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c52ab8f7d2cddfe10ae412dbd144a5a0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/7n6qt