Friday, April 26, 2013

Blog #8: Article Review

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Teaching with Technology / Technology & Pedagogy

The article I chose to read and review was entitled, “Flip Your Students’ Learning” by Aaron Sams and Jonathan Bergmann.  There were several reasons why I chose this article.  First, the superintendent of my school district e-mailed it to all of us teachers, so I thought it would be a good idea to share it will all of you.  Second, I am very interested in flipping my classroom, at least for one unit of study next year so I always like to get more information about it.  Third, this article definitely relates to what we have learned in this class. 
For those of you who don’t already know, a flipped classroom is where the instruction is presented to the students at home through use of online videos and practicing these concepts is done in class where the teacher can help.  The article explains that a lecture given by a teacher in class does not challenge students with higher order thinking.  A lecture, they explain, will lose very little if presented outside of the face-to-face meeting of the classroom setting.  Therefore, they argue that the delivery of new content should be done outside of the classroom, through use of instructional videos that the teacher can make, and the traditional homework assignment where students work on problems, apply, analyze, evaluate, and create, all higher levels thinking skills according to Bloom’s Taxonomy, can be done in class while the teacher is there to assist students.  Flipping a classroom, they also argue, inherently differentiates the lesson.  Students can move at their own pace and can rewatch the videos as necessary.
The second half of the article discusses suggested assessment methods for a flipped classroom.  The teachers in the article have students retake the assessment until the minimum level of mastery is achieved.  They offer alternative forms of assessment – the traditional test or quiz, a project, a presentation, creating a blog or videogame, etc.  I think the idea of having alternative forms of authentic assessment is great, but I think having students retake tests and quizzes until they mastered the material would be a challenge for me in my classroom, at least for now.
Throughout this course, we have discussed three different types of multimedia – still, audio, and moving.  This article focuses on the moving aspect of multimedia, videos.  On the last page of this article, the authors even go into detail about how to create an instruction video through the use of a screencast and what equipment is needed to create this screencast.  It brought me back to the MDMC project we did and the different multimedia tools available.