Flipping the Classroom: How to turn your students' worlds upside down

Presentation Date: 

Monday, October 15, 2012

Location: 

New England Board of Higher Education (Boston, MA)

Presentation Slides: 

In a flipped classroom, instructors typically move information coverage outside the classroom so that that they can better leverage in-class time to address student misunderstandings and misconceptions about subject matter. The most basic and popular iteration of a flipped class is pre-recording lectures, called screencasting, on key concepts for students and putting them online for viewing and engagement before class. In this workshop, Dr. Julie Schell will provide an overview of the history of the flipped classroom and introduce a set of innovative tools that go far beyond screencasting, which instructors can use to create learning environments that motivate student engagement both in and outside of the classroom. The workshop will feature a new classroom response system developed in the Mazur Group at Harvard University to facilitate one popular research-based flipped class method called Peer Instruction.