Creating Accountability in the Flipped Classroom
How do I make the students watch the
videos?
The flipped learning model is not a
silver bullet and there will still be students who do not do the homework. There is no magic elixir or special potion
that can be used to solve this problem.
There will be problems with the internet. Mom and Dad will be using the computer. Viruses will attack. And of course dogs will eat hard drives. Like
anything else when it comes to education it all comes down to who will be held
accountable and how will that be accomplished.
The best way to approach accountability
in the classroom; is to create a student centered environment where the
students have both control and ownership of their learning. Develop an attitude that learning is a
process to be valued not for the grade achieved but for the knowledge gained. Impress upon students that learning is the one
skill that is guaranteed to be part of their life for the rest of their life.
BER Flipped Classroom presenter Corey
Papastathis uses the concept of CANT to develop this accountability with his
students.
C - Choice (videos and assessment)
A - Accountability
N - No Excuses
T - Three Before Me
C – Choice
Provide choices for the students to
meet their responsibilities for learning.
Options in the videos they watch, the articles they read or the media used
to acquire knowledge. Provide a bank of
options for students to utilize and encourage them to explore other options on
their own.
Provide choices in the methods used to
demonstrate their understanding of the content and ways the standards have been
achieved. Assessment opportunities
should be both formative and summative and demand that students be capable of
dealing with higher order thinking.
In providing students with choices,
they can take ownership of the process and mean by which they learn.
A – Accountability
Educators must hold students
accountable for the information and content delivered outside of class. Students must produce something that
demonstrates their completion of the task.
The danger is when educators fall back on lower order questioning
students can simply borrow answers from their peers without actually completing
the expected learning process.
Examples could include: developing
questions for the next class review of the material, creating or responding to
a blog post on the content, presenting further research on the topic,
developing a lesson for the class, teaching a peer, what they learned.
Gary Philips of the National School
Improvement Project, found in his research on what the brain remembers thirty
days after what we have been taught. His
findings demonstrated that we remember 92% of what we have taught someone
else. Peer to peer teaching is the most
effective method of solidifying understanding and synthesizing material in
long-term memory.
Louis
Mangione – “Dynamic Teaching in the Block Schedule”
N – No Excuses
To create an environment of
accountability there must be no exceptions to the expectations. Each student
must be held accountable. There must be an understanding that each student has
a responsibility to themselves and to their classmates to be prepared with the
content knowledge necessary for the entire class to succeed. That is coming unprepared students are not
only cheating themselves but they cheat their lab partners and the entire class
by not being able to participate fully in the class.
However, educators must provide
students with ample opportunities and choice to be successful. Students must have a variety of media and
other sources available to attain the content knowledge. Options must be available that serve each
students needs, whether that be offering time outside of class to view videos
before or after school, in the library.
Are videos burned to DVD’s for students to watch through DVD players or
zip drives made available for students without internet connections at home.
The No Excuses mantra does not only
extend to the students but also to the educator as a teacher facilitator.
T – Three Before Me
Students must take charge of their own
learning by developing the skills necessary to problem solve and move forward
when a rough patch comes along.
Therefore the rule must be check three resources for possible solutions
before asking the teacher. Students can
ask each other, read the text, check their notes, review the media, watch an
additional video etc… etc…. Students
must build an attitude of self-advocacy, and responsibility for their
learning.
The teacher facilitator must in turn
take an authentic role as the “guide on the side”. Do not provide the easy out for the
student. It may be easier to just move
them along, but this is a disservice to the process of learning. It cripples the student as they try to take
of their own the process of learning.
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