| ACTIVE LEARNING |
By L. Dee Fink
Reprinted with permission of the University of Oklahoma Instructional Development Program, July 19, 1999
| 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."
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| 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.
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:
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.
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. |