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Using Blackboard to engage students in practical tutorial assignments

Using Blackboard to engage students in practical tutorial assignments. Karen Clarke, Politics Ian Fairweather, Social Anthropology. The course. Study skills/research methods course for 90+ 1 st year social science students Weekly one hour lecture & fortnightly tutorials

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Using Blackboard to engage students in practical tutorial assignments

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  1. Using Blackboard to engage students in practical tutorial assignments Karen Clarke, Politics Ian Fairweather, Social Anthropology

  2. The course • Study skills/research methods course for 90+ 1st year social science students • Weekly one hour lecture & fortnightly tutorials • Tutorials involve exercises which students upload and peer review • Contribute 25% of final mark

  3. Problems and Aims • Problems: • Technical problems with uploading • Peer review on fortnightly basis too cumbersome • Time intensive for GTAs • Poor student engagement with lectures • Aims • Improve the design of the Blackboard site for the tasks to make it more user-friendly (for both students and GTAs) • Better integration of lecture, tutorial and independent learning, incorporating more problem based learning into the lecture time

  4. Progress • Redesign of aspects of the Blackboard site: • Inclusion of guided tour to Blackboard • Improved look and feel of pages: simpler and easier to find way around • Provision of Blackboard demonstrations • Laptops for tutors’ use in tutorials • Rethinking the tutorial exercises: individual assignments with fortnightly feedback from tutor • More interactive lectures, including guidance for tutorial assignments • Occasional use of classroom clickers • Blackboard quizzes

  5. Lessons so far • Improved attendance and participation • Keep it simple! • avoid being tempted to use complex features of Blackboard (e.g. selective release dates for different groups) • be aware of need for cut-off date at very end of course to allow for excused late submissions • Importance of keeping up with returning work to students • Use lectures to provide opportunities for feedback from students

  6. Longer term • Challenges • Developing the interactive aspect of the lectures • Providing useful content to students with a wide range of backgrounds • Possible Solutions • Use principles of interactive, cooperative learning in lectures to support students’ independent learning. • Move to ‘enquiry based learning’ • Blogs and/or wikis to develop the collaborative and problem based aspects of teaching.

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