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There are
many valid reasons why teachers are flipping their classrooms. Flipping is a
proven pedagogy, not a gimmick or just the latest buzz word.
Attend the FlipCon
Australia 2015 conference to see flipping in action and be convinced too!
Flipping as synonymous with good teaching will resonate with many teachers.
The conference sessions address all the key reasons why flipping is good and provide plenty of
examples to demonstrate that flipping stands up to careful scrutiny. Engage in
presentations, hands-on workshops, discussions, debates and networking sessions
that promote flipping as a great
way of teaching well. Is flipping for you?
To learn more about FlipCon Australia 2015 which will be held at Saint
Stephen’s College, Coomera, QLD, on 22, 23 and 24 October 2015, and to
register, go to: ereg.me/FlipConAUS15
A possible
answer
Teachers are increasingly flipping their lessons. Not
necessarily all, but some, and that is legitimate.
Before teachers can decide whether flipping is for them, first let us explore what flipping is.
Definitions and models abound. The
explanation that follows makes the most sense of what flipping is and its
potential as a vehicle for great teaching and learning.
The concept of flipping is driven by answering two
fundamental questions:
- Am I teaching to the group from the front far too much?
- Am I using my face-to-face time with my students well, befitting the trained professional teacher that I am?
When teachers begin to unpick and answer these two questions, their practice begins to change and the elements of good teaching come to the fore.
The first thing that changes in establishing a flipped
classroom is the amount of time spent “lecturing to the class”. The time spent
doing this is cut right back – slashed! Quite a drastic step and it must be
replaced with “something new” or the teacher and the students might as well go
home. It is what this “lecturing to the class” is replaced by, that begins to
define flipped learning. Out with “lecturing to the class” – in with “something
new”!
In flipped classrooms the “something new” can take a variety
of forms. In one popular brand of the flipped class, the “something new” is the
video. The video replaces the teacher “lecturing to the class”. The creation of
these videos needs a fair bit of attention. They need to be engaging and
polished, but with a bit of effort, assisted by today’s great capture and
distribution technology, quality videos are easily developed and made available
to students. In this form, the teacher gives the lesson through the video and
the students watch the video, usually outside of the classroom for homework.
With the production of these videos the flip has begun. The teacher is now able to give the lesson outside of the classroom and in class time is freed up.
As an aside, it is important to say that videos of this
nature are not the only resource available to give the lesson outside of the
classroom. There are many commercial and open source products available to
teachers that allow them to put together a quality lesson for students to
engage with, outside of the classroom.
What happens in the
classroom?
This is where it gets exciting and it is a very simple
development that changes the nature of teaching. The teacher now has more time
in the class – for what? To exhibit the skills and knowledge acquired through
their professional training. Now that the lecturing is gone they simply have
more time to teach in the true sense of the word.
With time freed up, many of the elements of a flipped
classroom begin to emerge - elements that are synonymous with good teaching. It
is the flip that started the change!
The teacher encouraging and fostering higher order thinking in their students, is now more possible. Learning can be taken deeper for every student no matter what their capabilities. Students have a better chance of getting help on difficult topics, the teacher has more time to allow for differentiation and students are able to learn at their own pace. In short, flipping facilitates deeper and personalised learning.
With this important change the classroom dynamics change from one of
teaching, to one of learning. The dynamics are student-centric not
teacher-centric and that brings with it another element of good teaching –
learner agency. Students are given a greater chance of being autonomous and
being heard.
Through flipping, relationships are affected. Relationships between teacher and students change for the better. Students get closer to each other. All brought about by the increased two way communication and rich dialogue made possible because in class time has been freed up.
A not insignificant feature of the flipped class is the teacher’s
ability to manage those things which are traditionally difficult to manage.
Teacher and student absence is no longer the problem it was. Direct instruction
is now rarely missed because it is available 24/7 in the videos or some other
resource. Through absence, students will miss out on the in class higher order
activities, but with the learning now personalised, quality teachers can
quickly and expertly assist a student to move forward.
Some bits are tricky
Moving the lecture out of class time and replacing it with a
quality resource to be viewed by students outside of class, creates significant
work for the teacher at the front end. Creating resources takes time and skill.
Designing
personalised activities for students in the classroom that will enhance the
subject matter and motivate students to participate in deeper learning and
higher order thinking calls on a teacher’s professional training, knowledge and
skills more than ever.
Will students watch the videos or engage
with other resources for homework? They may not, but nothing has changed there.
It has been ever thus that students at times fail to do their homework.
Teachers will manage this aspect as they have always done – holding students accountable,
encouraging and monitoring.
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