Active Learning in Class Room

 
soundcharger on Thu, April 12, 2007 6:22 AM
Active Learning activities are highly important teaching tools that are often discarded by teachers because of the level of ‘risk’ involved in them. I would argue that the use of active teaching and learning techniques actually minimises the ‘risk’ by providing a greater variety of learning options to students: thus engaging them more and increasing their level of interest.

Active learning sessions cater for students whose learning preference fits into any, or several, of the Visual, Aural, Reading / Writing and Kinaesthetic styles. Through a range of carefully constructed questions and tasks students think critically, develop their empathy with the people involved in the ‘real’ events and, in my experience at least, form a much better understanding of how a range of complex factors can combine to cause further events. In addition to this active learning places the responsibility for learning in the hands of the student, and helps to develop their independent learning skills.

Replies:

nadia76pg on Fri, April 13, 2007 6:22 AM
Active Learning does include things noted in many of the other seminars. Interaction via Online Simulations, for example, is effective deployment of active learning. I found an interesting site on active learning by small video clips and synopsis. It’s www.skyquestcom.com/onlinevideo
Hope this helps.