字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント [opening music] LYNDA FRASER: What I'd like to do is look at each of these areas, since we're saying there's appropriate times to use them, right? Right times to use them. And times when it's not --- We teach the theory that goes along with high performance work groups. So students actually learn the theory and they have an opportunity to practice creating and making their own high performance work group. This classroom was a dream for me in that way. We talk about the fact that it's really important --- MEERA PATEL: Teachers sometimes generally have this persona of, "I'm the teacher, you're the student. I know everything." Well, in this class it was completely different. LYNDA FRASER: So conflict, then, can --- MEERA PATEL: One of the first things that I noticed when I was in the classroom was the position of the teacher's podium. It was right in the centre of the classroom. Students have access to the teacher and the teacher has access to the students to see, you know, what, what exactly is going on. LYNDA FRASER: Not having a front of the class means also that you don't have a back of the class and you don't have a fixed place for the professor to sit. That moved me a little bit out of my comfort zone. I tried to stand in different parts of the classroom so that all of the students would be more physically close to me at one time or another. I think there was a little bit of a discomfort, still, for the students who were used to the more traditional, "Let me just go and hide and be quiet in the back of the class." I mean, there's no place to hide in this classroom. Everybody is engaged. The envelopes on your desk have the style that your team is assigned to explore. So you can open those right now. See what your team, what your team has. [applause] LYNDA FRASER: The round tables have an amazing impact on the teams, on the teams being able to face one another, to communicate, have good eye contact. STUDENT: We said we'd delay it later, we'll discuss it later. STUDENT: So okay, let's talk it the next weekend. Let's don't just --- STUDENT: But that's just avoiding. STUDENT: That's not avoiding. That's not what I do. I do agree with whatever --- ANGELA MARZO: The round table leads discussions. They enable our interactions as a, as a group, as a team. LYNDA FRASER: And also for me to be with them. I could be part of a team at any point to advise and guide them. That was very, very helpful. STUDENT: In order to achieve --- LYNDA FRASER: Another thing about the classroom that had a big impact are the boards behind the tables for the students to work. We use them regularly. It was a wonderful opportunity for the whole team to work together. The students took turns writing and I think it also made them more confident about speaking out and being in the whole classroom. I mean, that, for me, was very different. Usually there's a big deal, "Oh, who's going to be the spokesperson?" It's always the same people. But I find the design of the room gave us an opportunity for more of an equality. I think the students, all of the students felt more engaged, more a part of the team, more a part of the whole class. DANIELLE PALMIOTTO: We had to collaborate as a team to discover what one could do to help the situation. And we're able to write on the wall, sorry. And demonstrate our ideas not only to our group, visually, but to the rest of the classroom. ANGELA MARZO: We actually build a case, they answer to the case in the computer, and for some teams, they were able to show the results, on the screen. DANIELLE PALMIOTTO: And since the laptops on the computer are foldable, we're able to just fold them down and see --- ANGELA MARZO: Yeah. DANIELLE PALMIOTTO: --- everybody at a table, you know? And share information like that. STUDENT: So what's going on? STUDENT: Yeah, an example is --- LYNDA FRASER: There were students who probably would not have been so engaged in another kind of classroom, who were initially uncomfortable. But I think, I think in the long run, they became more comfortable because they were forced to. And then they got used to that. And then they discovered parts of themselves that I think they didn't know were there. That, in fact, they could speak in a classroom and they could speak out loud. STUDENT: This person could possibly end up feeling very isolated because no one will work with them. LYNDA FRASER: That's a pretty powerful idea, Anne. Have you ever heard anybody say that? You've heard somebody say that? STUDENT: I do. LYNDA FRASER: You do that? STUDENT: Yes. LYNDA FRASER: What do you say? STUDENT: Well, I say about my -- our shortcomings, in the beginning, and I say that usually -- or I, I -- I believe that people think that I'm --- MEERAL PATEL: It's great when you can hear somebody else's ideas and it's, it's basically a missed opportunity when you don't hear the person expressing their, their -- their ideas. STUDENT: And listening more to other people's opinions. Open their minds a little bit. Respect other people's -- other people's ideas. STUDENT: Yeah. LYNDA FRASER: I'm now reading the student learning logs. For the first time, I have not seen any team complain about somebody who was not engaged, who pulled out, who had an easy ride, who was a couch potato. Now, isn't that something? [closing music}
A2 初級 アクティブラーニングの教室。みんなが夢中になっています! (Active Learning Classrooms: Everyone is engaged!) 90 7 Hhart Budha に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語