Teaching plant-animal interactions with active student participation and deep learning
Nøgleord:
plant-animal, interaction, participation, deep learning, experiment analysis, effectiveness, questonnaireResumé
Teachers can improve their performance and thus students’ learning outcome through systematic reflection on their teaching (Sølberg, 2015). And teaching and learning can be improved by adding variation in teaching methods and learning activities (Weimer, 1990). This paper reports the results of a didactical research project and is a reflection on planning and teaching
a three-hour session for master students in the course ‘Plant Animal Interactions. An Evolutionary Approach’ in the fall semester 2016 at the University of Copenhagen. I used recommendations described by Peter Stray Jørgensen (Jørgensen, 2015) and Donald A. Bligh (Bligh, 2000) to plan the session. The aim of the research project was to identify teaching methods that improve the student learning outcome of my teaching. I did this by adding five diverse learning activities throughout the session (lectures, microscopy, student experiment, experiment analysis, and presentation of experiment results). The students evaluated the perceived effectiveness of each learning activity immediately after the session in a questionnaire.
Downloads
Publiceret
Citation/Eksport
Nummer
Sektion
Licens
Fra og med årgang 19 (2023) er artikler udgivet i IUSTL udgivet med Creative Commons Navngivelse –Ikke-kommerciel (by-nc) licens. Redaktionen kan godkende andre Creative Commons Licencer for enkelte artikler, hvis forfatteren har anmodet om det.
Artikler i årgangene 1-18 er ikke udgivet under Creative Commons licens. I disse udgivelser tilfalder alle rettigheder forfatteren. Det betyder, at læsere kan downloade, læse og linke til artiklerne, men de kan ikke genudgive artiklerne. Forfatterne kan uploade deres artikler i et institutionsrepositiry som led i en grøn open access politik.