Friday, May 17, 2013

Flipped Teaching


With flipped teaching there are some pros and cons. Here are some pros of flipped teaching: 1. Students are engaging with materials predetermined by the teacher, so the teacher maintains a certain level of control. 2. Students are thinking critically. 3. Students get to vocalize what they’re not understanding, which gives them a sense of choice or involvement in mapping out how their learning is proceeding. 4. Students will come to class prepared with questions that they might not have understood while listening to the lecture the night before.
                Some cons would be: 1.Not all students may have access to computers at home/outside of school. 2. Small group assignments require a certain level of monitoring and engagement to make sure they don’t derail, which could be tricky on a class-by-class basis. Students might not stay on task and start talking about unrelated topics. 3. Teachers will need to develop ways to keep their video lessons/lectures engaging, otherwise students could get bored.
                While I think flipped teaching can work and does, I don’t feel that it enhances the learning for all students. Some students will learn better from the traditional way of teaching and some will learn better from the flipped point of view. Every student is different and I don’t think there is one way that is concrete to enhance learning for all students. Maybe using both approaches in the classroom could be the best way. The main issue I have with flipped teaching is some students might not have access to a computer outside of the school.
                I believe flipped teaching can create a global learning environment because anything that gets posted on the web can be seen by anyone. Videos/lectures could be posted on the internet and thousands of students could watch/listen to these to help them learn.

3 comments:

  1. I agree that flipped teaching will not be successful with every student and that some may learn better with the traditional method. I think you made a good point when you mentioned that using both approaches interchangeably in the classroom may be best.

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  2. I think flipped teaching can meet everyones needs if the teacher differs the lessons and ways of teaching. If one night he assigns a movie to watch, the next an article to read, the next a writing assignment, it could possibly reach more students' needs. I also think that differing the lessons would help to keep students engaged!!

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  3. I also agree that flipped teaching will not be successful with every student. But no matter what form of teaching is being used in the classroom, more than likely a few children wont learn best with what is being used. It is just up to the teacher to see what form of teaching works best with that specific class.

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