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abstract

Engage, Energize and Empower Your Students with Team-Based Learning (Abstract Only)

Published: 17 February 2016 Publication History

Abstract

Even when we believe the research that shows that active learning is particularly helpful to both engage and empower students--they learn better, they learn deeper and it addresses issues of diversity--it's often not clear to us how we can implement it while keeping the quality of our course high. At UAlbany, courses taught using TBL including: computer programming, data structures, databases, web programming, networking and others. TBL is a structured method that can help instructors improve student learning and energize their classrooms. Team Based Learning (TBL) is an approach to course design that takes advantage of research into what helps students learn. Students work in permanent teams and course meetings are organized around application exercises. Courses are divided into units, and students are held responsible for the core reading in a beginning-of-unit test taken both as individuals and as teams. Application exercises conform to core principles ("4S"): Teams all work on the SAME problem, teams make a SPECIFIC choice, the problem must be SIGNIFICANT, and the teams must make a SIMULTANEOUS report of answers. A variant of the "flipped classroom," the TBL course spends far less time "covering the material" in class, allowing course time to be spent on skill development and feedback on student work. In this hands-on workshop, participants will experience a model TBL learning sequence and learn active learning techniques that they can adopt in any classroom while learning the basics of the TBL method.

References

[1]
Hrynchak, Patricia, and Helen Batty. "The educational theory basis of team-based learning." Medical teacher 34.10 (2012): 796--80.
[2]
Michaelsen, Larry K., and Michael Sweet. "Team-based learning." New directions for teaching and learning 2011.128 (2011): 41--51.
[3]
Sisk, Rebecca J. "Team-based learning: systematic research review." The Journal of nursing education 50.12 (2011): 665--669.
[4]
Thompson, Britta M., et al. "Team-based learning at ten medical schools: two years later." Medical education 41.3 (2007): 250--257.

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  1. Engage, Energize and Empower Your Students with Team-Based Learning (Abstract Only)

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      cover image ACM Conferences
      SIGCSE '16: Proceedings of the 47th ACM Technical Symposium on Computing Science Education
      February 2016
      768 pages
      ISBN:9781450336857
      DOI:10.1145/2839509
      Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the Owner/Author.

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      Association for Computing Machinery

      New York, NY, United States

      Publication History

      Published: 17 February 2016

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      Author Tags

      1. active learning
      2. computer science teaching
      3. team-based learning

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      SIGCSE '16
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      SIGCSE '16 Paper Acceptance Rate 105 of 297 submissions, 35%;
      Overall Acceptance Rate 1,595 of 4,542 submissions, 35%

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