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Teaching

Find insights to improve teaching and learning across your campus. Delivered on Thursdays. To read this newsletter as soon as it sends, sign up to receive it in your email inbox.

December 6, 2018
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From: Beth McMurtrie

Subject: How One University Uses ‘Sneaky Learning’ to Help Students Develop Good Study Habits

Hello and welcome to Teaching, a free weekly newsletter from The Chronicle of Higher Education. This week:

  • Beth explains how psychologists at Colorado State are helping students incorporate science-based learning strategies into their studying.
  • Beth summarizes the heated debate prompted by yet another critique of student course evaluations.
  • Dan passes along examples of unusual STEM assignments that you shared with us.

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Hello and welcome to Teaching, a free weekly newsletter from The Chronicle of Higher Education. This week:

  • Beth explains how psychologists at Colorado State are helping students incorporate science-based learning strategies into their studying.
  • Beth summarizes the heated debate prompted by yet another critique of student course evaluations.
  • Dan passes along examples of unusual STEM assignments that you shared with us.

‘Sneaky Learning’

Students come to college armed with some really misguided ideas on how to study. Cramming before an exam is a classic one. So is rereading the same passage over and over in hopes of understanding what it means. But what’s the best way to get them to think differently and study more successfully?

Colorado State University has been experimenting with the role that science and technology can play in breaking those bad habits. Anne M. Cleary, a psychology professor who studies human memory, has helped develop a number of those efforts, including the creation of a course called “The Science of Learning,” which is open to all undergraduates. The primary message, says Cleary, is don’t trust your gut. Learning is not intuitive. Research shows a disconnect between what people think are the best ways to learn and the habits that actually lead to true understanding and retention.

“Those strategies that are most effective may feel least effective,” she says. “Part of the goal is to help them appreciate science as a valuable source of information.”

To that end, students study the research behind different learning strategies. Take cramming, for example. Students learn that, while people estimate they learn better studying all at once versus spacing out their learning, studies show the opposite. Similarly, people perform better when they test themselves on what they know while they are studying, as opposed to reading the same material over and over.

Students are encouraged to put these strategies into practice in their other classes as they take the course, which has been open to all students since 2015. Cleary says one particular comment from a student perfectly encapsulates its approach: “I’ve been implementing these techniques & it doesn’t feel like it is going to have any effect,” the student wrote. “Then I take a quiz or a test & realize how much I’ve learned, & it’s almost like the learning just sneaks up on you. It’s like, I would call it, sneaky learning.”

Cleary loves that phrase: sneaky learning. So far, she says, the course has been successful. Evaluations show that undergraduates come away with a much better understanding of what works. “Where we still struggle is implementing the strategies,” she says. “Knowing is half the battle.”

Students may intend to space their studying out over several days, for example, but find themselves cramming yet again for a big exam because they have trouble juggling their schedules.

That’s where the second leg of her strategy comes in: technology. She and her colleagues are experimenting with a program that, when fed relevant questions, can ping students at random times throughout the week. While watching Netflix one night, for example, a student may see a question pop up on her smartwatch: How many plates make up the earth’s crust? A minute later, the answer appears.

The strategy builds on the idea that “downhill changes,” as Cleary calls them — those that can be easily incorporated into your life — are more likely to stick than major changes in behavior. It also uses the concept of nudges, popularized by the legal scholar Cass Sunstein, which holds that you can prompt positive changes in behavior through small incentives.

Of course the investment needed to make this work on a large scale is considerable. After testing out the technology on a dozen people with good results, her team is now working with the campus Center for the Analytics of Learning and Teaching to scale up the experiment to an entire course.

Other experiments include a one-credit recitation session for a biomedical-science course, in which instructors give students exercises tailored to the class — like having them write a letter to their grandmother explaining a concept they learned that week. Cleary has also brought her message to a campuswide initiative called the First Four Weeks, a workshop in which faculty members who run large-enrollment, first-year courses are taught about the science of learning, among other things.

Her goal, ultimately, is to develop enough venues for this work so that all students and instructors will have exposure to practical applications of the science of learning. She’d love to see the “Science of Learning” class offered to every first-year student, for example. “I mentioned this idea to administrators, and always get an enthusiastic response,” she says, noting that the course wouldn’t have been possible without support from the provost’s office. “But pushing things through is a whole other challenge.”

In January, Oxford University Press is releasing a book written by Cleary and her colleagues Matthew G. Rhodes and Edward L. DeLosh. It’s called A Guide to Effective Studying and Learning: Practical Strategies From the Science of Learning, and is based on their work to date.

Have you had success incorporating science-based learning strategies into your class? If so, drop me a line at beth.mcmurtrie@chronicle.com, and your story may appear in a future newsletter.

Revamp Your College’s General-Education Program

A thorough, well-planned gen-ed program is essential to preparing today’s students for an increasingly complex world. Get this special report for key insights into what you need to know before rethinking your college’s core courses.

Moment of Change

For many professors, teaching is the most challenging — and rewarding — part of the job. The Chronicle asked a group of professors to tell us about a moment that changed how they approach the classroom. Here’s what they told us.

Was there a moment like that in your own career that you’d like to share? We’re collecting them here, and may include them in a future newsletter.

The Debate Over Course Evaluations

If you want to start a fight among academics, just find people on the opposite sides of the fence on student course evaluations and let them go at it. A recent opinion essay got many of our readers in a lather, with blunt words, pro and con. The author, a professor emerita at Michigan State University, complained that the evaluations hurt both instructors and students. In short, they give students unearned power over their teachers, which encourages students to be lazy and disengaged.

On our Facebook page, some readers praised the piece and knocked evaluations for, as one person put it, encouraging students to be “cowardly back-stabbers. With no communication skills.”

“You have an issue?” wrote this commenter. “Resolve it by talking, not waiting till the end of the semester in silence to write something that really will make no damn difference.”

That prompted a critique. “The notion that student evals are *only* designed to address problems seems to reflect a fundamental misunderstanding of what this tool allows,” another reader wrote. “Yes, the evals give students an opportunity to register complaints about things they didn’t like in a course, but they also allow them to weigh in on activities they found engaging or misguided, rewarding or rote, etc. They can give us incredibly valuable insight into our teaching methods and practices, whether we accept their views or not.”

The debate goes back and forth through dozens of comments.

Pro: Evaluations give otherwise powerless students the opportunity to voice their opinions about the quality of instruction, and they give administrators a sense of how well their faculty members connect with students.

Con: Some colleges use these evaluations like a blunt instrument: tying reviews to raises and promotions, while abdicating their responsibility to professionally evaluate the effectiveness of faculty teaching. The evaluation often comes too late in the process to provide instructors with meaningful feedback, and research has shown that evaluations are subject to gender bias and other forms of prejudice.

It’s also clear that many people are searching for alternatives. So, here’s one. In June our colleague Beckie Supiano wrote about how the University of Southern California ditched the traditional evaluation and replaced it with one that asks students more-nuanced questions about their learning experiences. And at the end of her story you can find resources on other models for evaluating teaching and on training students to give better feedback.

Unusual STEM Assignments

A few weeks ago, we told you about a professor’s unusual assignment and asked you to give examples of your own. Several readers in STEM disciplines emailed us to share what they do.

Jan Reichard-Brown, an associate professor of biology at Susquehanna University, sometimes assigns her students to create a public-health brochure about parasites. It “requires interdisciplinary thinking and synthesis of the material,” she wrote.

And two of you have used the conventions of magazine writing to help students translate complex scientific concepts for a general audience.

David C. Stone, an associate professor of analytical chemistry and chemistry education at the University of Toronto, has asked students to write about a research article from a scholarly journal, but to do so in the style of a general-interest magazine. A few students produced mini-magazines, and one even featured an editorial and advertising. The exercise, he wrote, develops students’ ability to communicate complex subjects in a way the public can understand. Stone also found that the assignment prompts students to put concepts in their own words instead of simply copying jargon, which allows him to see more clearly whether they understand a subject’s underlying concepts.

Along the same lines, Kaitlin Stack Whitney, a visiting assistant professor and environmental-studies scholar at the Rochester Institute of Technology, has her students make zines, or homemade publications featuring both text and images. The informality and visual nature of the form, she thinks, help motivate students to create deeply researched and creative products.

For example, a team of students made a zine last year about algae in Lake Ontario, for which they read papers about the algae, collected water samples from the lake, and took microscopy images. “They made their research visible,” Stack Whitney wrote.

Part of the value of the assignment, she wrote, is that “explaining to others is the best way to demonstrate synthesis.”

Thanks for reading Teaching. If you have suggestions or ideas, please feel free to email us at dan.berrett@chronicle.com or beth.mcmurtrie@chronicle.com. If you have been forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive your own copy, you can sign up here.

—Beth and Dan

Teaching & Learning
Beth McMurtrie
Beth McMurtrie is a senior writer for The Chronicle of Higher Education, where she writes about the future of learning and technology’s influence on teaching. In addition to her reported stories, she helps write the weekly Teaching newsletter about what works in and around the classroom. Email her at beth.mcmurtrie@chronicle.com, and follow her on Twitter @bethmcmurtrie.
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