Higher Education Teaching and Learning
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Higher Education Teaching and Learning
Issues and priorities arising around academic development, teaching and learning in Higher Education.
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Reassessing the Value of University Lectures

Reassessing the Value of University Lectures | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it

I still rate 'Reassessing the Value of University Lectures' by Sarah French and Gregor Kennedy (2015) as one of the best discussions around lectures.

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Rescooped by Peter Mellow from Digital Learning - beyond eLearning and Blended Learning
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Active learning works as well online as in classrooms.

Active learning works as well online as in classrooms. | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
With classes online, “active learning” is more important than ever.
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Zoning university technology to the students.

It is unforgivable that so many students still spend most of their learning time at universities, whether on or off campus, being lectured-at.
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Remote Learning Begs the Question: Must Lectures Be So Long?

Remote Learning Begs the Question: Must Lectures Be So Long? | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
With some schools already announcing they will not reopen normally in the fall, and many others considering their options, educators are hoping to take advantage of the summer to improve on this spring’s sink-or-swim plunge into distance learning. Much of this reflection is likely to take place within the often siloed communities of practice in K-12 and higher education.

One source for insights on how to proceed is the cross-pollination that takes place when educators working in separate spheres learn from one another. Insights that derive from dialog between K-12, higher education, and online-learning providers could well shape instructional practices for the better as students return to school, whether in a classroom or over Zoom.

In my 2014 book “MOOCS Essentials,” I reflected on each aspect of the residential learning process and how developers of massive open online courses were trying to replicate those experiences virtually, or come up with ways to keep students engaged without direct teacher-student interaction. This was followed by a stint helping to create a new graduate school of education that required understanding the job of a K-12 teacher well enough to create a set of teachable and measurable competencies that would undergird a competency-based teacher-education program.

From these experiences, it became clear that every aspect of education could benefit from sharing of experience and expertise across educational sectors.

What’s the Use of Lectures?
For many, the recent leap to remote instruction felt rushed, chaotic and disorganized. Many things did not translate well online. Yet that discomfort also raises opportunities to question prevailing assumptions about how teaching and learning occurs. Let’s start with one of education’s most hallowed traditions: the lecture.

In his 1971 book “What’s the Use of Lectures?,” author Donald Bligh compared the four things teachers claimed students would get from lectures (acquisition of information, promotion of thought, changes in attitude, and development of behavior skills) with what his research showed pupils actually gained: only acquisition of information.
Peter Mellow's insight:
I still rate 'Reassessing the Value of University Lectures' by Sarah French and Gregor Kennedy (2015) as one of the best discussions around lectures.

Brenda VanDenBerg's curator insight, September 19, 2020 3:55 PM
Lecture in learning, do we need them?  If indeed, we do need them, how long do they need to be.  Will online replace lecturing or will lecturing evolve to fit the new online learning platform?
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Cambridge University: All lectures to be online-only until summer of 2021

Cambridge University: All lectures to be online-only until summer of 2021 | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
There will be no face-to-face lectures in the next academic year due to coronavirus, the university says.
Urbano Matos's curator insight, May 22, 2020 3:22 PM
A universidade de Cambridge só planeja aulas presenciais para o verão de 2021. Provavelmente será um retorno parcial, mantendo boa parte das aulas on-line.
Efetivamente este é um caminho sem volta.
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No room for you in lectures, top universities tell first-year students

No room for you in lectures, top universities tell first-year students | Higher Education Teaching and Learning | Scoop.it
‘Desperate’ institutions offer overflow rooms and YouTube live streams instead of a seat in front of a lecturer
Peter Mellow's insight:
Or, if you continue to lecture to students, why not run two lectures instead of one so all students can attend, get a seat and participate? Seems like it is giving students a bad experience in the hope of some dropping out, while the Uni pockets their fees. Education, the student, and learning are not the winners.
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