Many college teachers today want to move past
passive learning to active learning, to find better ways
of engaging students in the learning process. But many teachers
feel a need for help in imagining what to do, in or out
of class, that would constitute a meaningful set of active
learning activities.
The model below offers a way of conceptualizing the learning
process in a way that may assist teachers in identifying
meaningful forms of active learning.
A Model of Active Learning
Explanation of the Components
This model suggests that all learning activities involve
some kind of experience or some kind of dialogue. The two
main kinds of dialogue are "Dialogue with Self"
and "Dialogue with Others." The two main kinds
of experience are "Observing" and "Doing."
Dialogue with Self: This is what happens when a learner
thinks reflectively about a topic, i.e., they ask themselves
what they think or should think, what they feel about the
topic, etc. This is "thinking about my own thinking,"
but it addresses a broader array of questions than just
cognitive concerns. A teacher can ask students, on a small
scale, to keep a journal for a course, or, on a larger scale,
to develop a learning portfolio. In either case, students
could write about what they are learning, how
they are learning, what role this knowledge or learning
plays in their own life, how this makes them feel,
etc.
Dialogue with Others: This can and does come in many
forms. In traditional teaching, when students read a textbook
or listen to a lecture, they are "listening to"
another person (teacher, book author); this can perhaps
be viewed as "partial dialogue" but it is limited
because there is no back-and-forth exchange. A much more
dynamic and active form of dialogue occurs when a teacher
creates an intense small group discussion on a topic. Sometimes
teachers can also find creative ways to involve students
in dialogue situations with people other than students (e.g.,
practitioners, experts), either in class or outside of class.
Whoever the dialogue is with, it might be done live, in
writing, or by email.
Observing: This occurs whenever a learner watches
or listens to someone else "doing" something that
is related to what they are learning about. This might be
such things as observing one's teacher do something (e.g.,
"This is how I critique a novel."), listening
to other professionals perform (e.g., musicians), or observing
the phenomena being studied (natural, social, or cultural).
The act of observing may be "direct" or "vicarious."
A direct observation means the learner is observing the
real action, directly; a vicarious observation is observing
a simulation of the real action. For example, a direct observation
of poverty might be for the learner to actually go to where
low income people are living and working, and spend some
time observing life there. A vicarious or indirect observation
of the same topic might be to watch a movie involving poor
people or to read stories written by or about them.
Doing: This refers to any learning activity where
the learner actually does something: design a reservoir
dam (engineering), conduct a high school band (music education),
design and/or conduct an experiment (natural and social
sciences), critique an argument or piece of writing (the
humanities), investigate local historical resources(history),
make an oral presentation (communication), etc.
Multiple Kinds of Activities to Promote
Active Learning
According to this model of Active Learning,
a teacher should select teaching/learning activities that
combine all three of the major kinds of learning: getting
information/ideas, doing and/or observing experience, and
reflective dialogue with oneself and/or others. The table
below identifies specific learning activities for each of
these three categories and identifies with direct, indirect,
and online ways of getting information and ideas.
One of the valuable aspects of this model
is that it allows quick identification of the strenths and
problems of the rapidly emerging area of online learning.
For example, online learning is very good at providing students
with information and ideas. It can provide the mechanisms
for reflective dialogue. The challenge for online learning
is whether it can adequately provide meaningful "doing"
and "observing" experiences for students.
Again, "Doing" may be direct or vicarious. Case
studies, role-playing and simulation activities offer ways
of vicariously engaging students in the "doing"
process. To take one example mentioned above, if one is
trying to learn how to conduct a high school band, direct
"Doing" would be to actually go to a high school
and direct the students there. A vicarious "Doing"
for the same purpose would be to simulate this by having
the student conduct a band composed of fellow college students
who were acting like (i.e., role playing) high school students.
Or, in business courses, doing case studies is, in essence,
a simulation of the decision making process that many courses
are aimed at teaching.
Implementing This Model of Active Learning
So, what can a teacher do who wants to use
this model to incorporate more active learning into his/her
teaching? I would recommend the following three suggestions,
each of which involves a more advanced use of Active Learning.
1. Expand the Kinds of Learning Experiences
You Create. The most traditional teaching consists of
little more than having students read a text and listen
to a lecture, a very limited and limiting form of "Dialogue
with Others." Consider using more dynamic forms of
Dialogue with Others and the other three modes of learning.
For example:
- Create small groups of students and have them make
a decision or answer a focused question periodically;
- Find ways for students to engage in authentic dialogue
with people other than fellow classmates who know something
about the subject (on the web, by email, or live);
- Have students keep a journal or build a "learning
portfolio" about their own thoughts, learning,
feelings, etc.;
- Find ways of helping students observe (directly or
vicariously) the subject or action they are trying to
learn; and/or
- Find ways to allow students to actually do (directly,
or vicariously with case studies, simulation or role
play) that which they need to learn to do.
2. Take Advantage of the "Power
of Interaction". Each of the four modes of learning
has its own value, and just using more of them should add
variety and thereby be more interesting for the learner.
However, when properly connected, the various learning activities
can have an impact that is more than additive or cumulative;
they can be interactive and thereby multiply the
educational impact.
For example, if students write their own thoughts on a topic
(Dialogue with Self) before they engage in small
group discussion (Dialogue with Others), the group discussion
should be richer and more engaging. If they can do both
of these and then observe the phenomena or action (Observation),
the observation should be richer and again more engaging.
Then, if this is followed by having the students engage
in the action itself (Doing), they will have a better sense
of what they need to do and what they need to learn during
doing. Finally if, after Doing, the learners process this
experience by writing about it (Dialogue with Self) and/or
discussing it with others (Dialogue with Others), this will
add further insight. Such a sequence of learning activities
will give the teacher and learners the advantage of the
Power of Interaction.
Alternatively, advocates of Problem-Based Learning would
suggest that a teacher start with "Doing" by posing
a real problem for students to work on, and then having
students consult with each other (Dialogue with Others)
on how best to proceed in order to find a solution to the
problem. The learners will likely use a variety of learning
options, including Dialogue with Self and Observing.
3. Create a Dialectic Between Experience
and Dialogue. One refinement of the Interaction Principle
described above is simply to create a dialectic between
the two principle components of this Model of Active Learning:
Experience and Dialogue. New experiences (whether of Doing
or Observing) have the potential to give learners a new
perspective on what is true (beliefs) and/or what is good
(values) in the world. Dialogue (whether with Self or with
Others) has the potential to help learners construct the
many possible meanings of experience and the insights that
come from them. A teacher who can creatively set up a dialectic
of learning activities in which students move back and forth
between having rich new experiences and engaging in deep,
meaningful dialogue, can maximize the likelihood that the
learners will experience significant and meaningful learning.