Jan 222016
 

Collaborative Learning

Collaborative Learning – Collaborative classrooms mark wave of the future in higher education

Student-centered models turn instructors into guides as students investigate for them selves

Tom’s comments:

Kudos to California State University, Fresno, for changing traditional one size fits all teaching paradigms, to student centered, facilitated,  21st century learning paradigms!

The question we then need to ask is: WHY are other higher ed organizations continuing to TEACH with ineffective, ineffective, dis-proven, one size fits all methodologies (lecture, traditional elearning, lecture delivered online – MOOCs, video, word docs, pdf. files)?

Obviously, we know one size fits all, anything, does not empower individual students with adaptive learning skills, that advance sustained, individual, performance improvement, so why do we continue to use a dis-proven, teaching methodology?

Education Change Teaching to Learning

Competency Models

What the Experts, are Saying and Have Said

Paradigm Paralysis: Would this be Tolerated Anywhere Else?

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collaborative learningCollaborative Learning – When Otto Benavides suggested computer classrooms for the Instructional Technology and Resource Center (INTERESC) for the School of Education and Human Development at California State University, Fresno, people thought he was talking about computer labs. No, he said, computer classrooms.

That was 1994 and much has changed. Student-centered, collaborative classroom design is exploding across higher education and virtually all faculty today understand the difference between labs of computers and classrooms that feature them. INTERESC has three collaborative classrooms in high demand and plans to design more as soon as there’s money to build them.

The designs put students at the center of instruction, shifting the faculty role to one of tutor or guide.

“This changes the whole way we teach,” Benavides said.

At the School of Education, students benefit from more engaging class periods, as well as the modeling of how to be comfortable with technology as teachers. Their instructors serve as content guides, and they also help solve technical problems that are sure to crop up in the modern classrooms.

At CSU Fresno, faculty from Communications, Art, and English as a Second Language departments have jockeyed for a spot in the classrooms, recognizing the benefits for their students. In New York State, Onondaga Community College recently opened the WhiTn3y Commons, giving business students the opportunity to work in teams and practice the skills they’ll need for workplace projects. MIT offers a range of technology-enabled learning spaces to meet the demands of students and faculty across disciplines.

Some colleges and universities are designing these spaces in new, modern buildings, while others are remodeling existing classrooms and making them work for this next generation of teaching and learning.

Collaborative Learning – Read the rest of the article

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Tom McDonald, tsm@centurytel.net; 608-788-5144; Skype: tsmw5752 collaborative learning