Tag: Flipped classroom

  • Connect, Engage and Succeed in Math: HOTmaths & Tutoring

    Connect, Engage and Succeed in Math – Why tutoring with HOTmaths can improve your chances of success.
    For any parent or student considering or already engaging a tutor for math there are 4 keys to success to consider.  HOTmaths (www.hotmaths.com.au) has been designed and built by math teachers to meet the needs of students who learn different things at different times at a different pace and for different reasons.  Math is universal, whereas HOTmaths was born Australian – the birthplace of many inventions that we cannot do without today, such as the notepad (yes, the paper one!), the electric drill, plastic spectacle lenses and WiFi .  Here are the 4 keys to success and how HOTmaths can help:
    1. Build the foundations before the walls

    Everything you learn in math is built on what comes before.  Any concept that is being taught at any level beyond learning to count requires prior knowledge, understanding and application of prior concepts.  This is why any teacher, tutor or student subscribing to HOTmaths has access to all topics, all lessons and all year levels of the site.  In every lesson there are links to previous concepts that are needed in order to ensure the best learning outcomes, so students jump immediately to something they need to review or re-study.  These links can also be discovered through the HOTmaths dictionary. Student topic and lesson reports show the teacher/tutor where individual students have struggled and allow them to direct remedial work where necessary through the Task Manager application that enables the teacher/tutor to set specific class or homework tasks that target specific student needs.

     

    Fig 1 – links to prior content

    Fig 2 – Dictionary showing explanation and links to prior content

    Fig 3 – Setting homework tasks

    2. Engage, don’t lecture

    Technology in education has radically changed how we teach and learn – the new learning environment is flexible, expansive, interconnected and individualized.  HOTmaths takes advantage of these new possibilities by providing students with multiple entry points into math content, then allowing them to choose to learn in the way that suits them best. Learning is personalized, varied and vitally, fun.

    There are ‘widgets’ (interactive activities and games) that engage visual learners who may struggle with text-based or traditional teacher-led lessons.  For kinesthetic learners, those that learn by doing, there is a range of open-ended investigations and problem-solving tasks linking math to the real world and turning theory into tangible, comprehensible ideas. Students who prefer to work logically and methodically, often text-based learners, are supported with walkthrough problems that guide students step by step through the skills needed to complete multi-step tasks.  These activities break questions down into single, logical steps that the student can work through at their own pace and level, receiving individualized feedback as they go to reinforce their understanding of the processes.

    Regardless of the way students learn or choose to study, their work is instantly marked and their level of understanding diagnosed.  In this reflexive and highly individualized learning environment, teachers/tutors can customize a learning path for each individual student to give them the best chance of successful learning.

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    Fig 4 – Widgets and games engage students’ imagination

    Fig 5 – HOTsheet investigations encourage problem solving

    Fig 6 – Walkthoughs lead students on a step by step journey of discovery

    3. Teach, don’t test

    Regardless of how we might feel about standardized testing, we live in a results oriented world, and parents want their children to succeed. Teachers and tutors are expected to prepare students for examinations, testing what they have learned and practicing test-taking conditions and techniques. HOTmaths offers test-generating facilities that teachers/tutors can use to create practice tests and timed conditions. Tests can be customized with ease to focus on specific areas needing practice for whole classes, groups and even individuals.  This allows for valuable class time to be spent teaching, not testing.  Timed and time-limited tests can be assigned as homework with results immediately available to teachers/tutors in a format that is fully exportable for keeping parents up-to-date with their child’s progress.

    Fig 7 – Test generator for creating bespoke, self-marking tests

    4. Learn, don’t memorize

    Benjamin Franklin once said ‘Tell me and I forget, teach me and I remember, involve me and I learn.’  The reason most parents employ a tutor for their child is because a good tutor identifies the individual needs of the student and adapts to her capabilities.  As we have seen, HOTmaths provides the tools good teachers and tutors need to personalize lessons, engage student attention and create enthusiasm and interest that involves each student in math so that they learn, not just remember.

    Learning and remembering are not the same. Anything remembered can be forgotten. Anything learned is for life. Is it possible to ‘un-learn’ how to ride a bicycle for example?   Real learning comes when we take risks. We have to fall off a bicycle before we learn to ride.

    The opposite of ‘remember’ is ‘forget’.  There is no opposite for learning, nor is there a substitute.

    To try HOTmaths free click here.  For more information about trialing HOTmaths with a group of students with full access to reporting and assessment tools or for group pricing quotes, click here.
    Mark O’Neil is CEO of HOTmaths and passionate about education. He believes that imagination and creativity need to be given a higher priority in schooling and that only a transformation of how children are educated will lead to more children succeeding.  Follow him on twitter @moneil365 and @hotmathshq

  • Flipping the Classroom to Break Through into Today´s Society

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    Mayra Aixa Villar is a freelance instructional designer and researcher who is passionate about educational technology.  She is currently finishing a thesis to obtain an MA in Applied Linguistics. Her dissertation is about linguistic modeling and computer-based applications. This project has allowed her to intern at UN HQ, participate in international meetings and collaborate in several research activities. You can also follow Mayra on Twitter @MayraAixaVillar or on http://ar.linkedin.com/in/mayraaixavillar
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    Flipping the classroom to break through into Today´s society

    Nowadays, teachers and tutors have a great challenge to face: adapt their practices to the digital era in order to prevent classroom contents from becoming obsolete. There is a paramount need to examine how students are taught so to help them undergo the rapid changes of the real world. How can educational practices be suitable to students´ current needs and to the job requirements imposed by today´s society?

    A very interesting concept has been recently coined by Jonathan Bergman and Aaron Sams (2007): “the flipped classroom”. This model advocates for a change in the participants´ traditional roles, use of technology in education as well as innovative and interactive learning activities. Classroom flip provides the opportunity for learning through action, reflection and collaboration.

    Flipped roles

    In archaic educational models, the teacher used to be the only “owner of the truth”, the only expert. But, nowadays, the abundance of information and the prevalence of digital sources challenge the role of the teacher as unique source of knowledge and at the same time; require him/her to become a facilitator of learning experiences and a curator of learning content. Thus, the teacher should show students new alternatives to integrate content, discover how to connect classrooms lessons to real-life situations and then, develop the necessary skills to assimilate, apply and build -not just consume- knowledge.

    Figure 1. One of the main features of the “Flipped Classroom”: A new role for the teacher

    By using technology, teachers and tutors can offer students the tools they need to break through into the Knowledge and Information Society. Through ICT, students are encouraged to play an active role in their learning process. They search information, make decisions, critically analyze content, identify real problems, propose solutions based on online research findings and can evaluate the feasibility of their conclusions.

    Flipped activities

    The learning becomes meaningful as students can build up their own understanding through experimentation and collaboration. Students do know how to use new technological devices, they also know that information is simply a click away; but they need guidance on how to digest the vast information out there, how to transform it, revise it, and apply it to acquire new knowledge and new skills. Now, bearing that in mind, teachers can pave the way for students´ success outside the classroom, if they design activities that:

    • lead to exploration and reflection

    • are context-embedded

    • allow for open participation and even, new questions

    • require the use of multidisciplinary resources

    • promote collaborative work

    • develop problem-solving and critical thinking skills

    • foster the systematized use of technological resources

    • connect classroom lessons to real-life situations

    The following diagram shows the characteristics and outcomes of the “Flipped Classroom” activities:

    Figure 2. Activities’ characteristics and outcomes.

    In short, it is all about engaging the students as problem-finders and solvers, active technology users and co-workers as the teacher guides their interaction with resources, content and peers. As Andrea Kurlan states in her article Recoding the classroom, “[in this way] we can catalyze a wave of social change” and students will be able to embrace the real, changing world.

    References

    Andrew Churches (2011) A 21st Century Pedagogy. Retrieved June 20, 2011, from http://edorigami.wikispaces.com/21st+Century+Pedagogy

    Andrea Kurlan (2011) Recoding the Classroom. Retrieved January 2, 2012, from http://www.thinkwithgoogle.com/quarterly/speed/recoding-the-classroom-education-feature.html

    Knewton Infographics (2011) The Flipped Classroom. Retrieved January 6, 2012, from http://www.knewton.com/flipped-classroom/

     
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