What is Active Learning?
“Liberating education consists in acts of cognition, not transferrals of information.” Paulo Friere, Pedagogy of the Oppressed.
Active or engaged learning is not always visible to professors. Highly experienced learners can be active and engaged in a 45-minute lecture, only demonstrating their engagement later when they submit brilliant papers. Most learners, however, do not yet have the experience or capacity to distract themselves from the pressing world around them to self-engage, relying only on their minds.
Thus the importance of active and learning pedagogies and strategies. We offer some of our favorites. Have one to share? Tell us!
Briefly, active, and engaged learning invites students to:
- apply (authentic, real-world application)
- problem-solve
- construct knowledge through doing
- experiment
- discuss, debate, consider
Meaningful Active Learning:
- explicitly meets a course or program learning objective
- is purposeful and intentionally planned
Incorporating active learning into each class session supports students in their learning, allowing them to reflect on, apply, and work with course material and concepts.
Simple Active Learning Strategies to Use in Class
Active Learning in Large Classes
Engaging Discussions
Socratic Dialogue, Jigsaw, Fish Bowl, Snow Ball, Critical Debate, and more strategies to systematically engineer discussions so they deeply engage all students.
Discussion Guidelines
Montclair State Professors Jessica Henry and Katherine Herbert offer suggestions for managing class discussion, in person and online, respectively.
Discussing Equity: Using Protocols to Deepen Conversation and Raise Intellectual Engagement
Flipped Learning Approach
Last Modified: Friday, February 9, 2024 2:16 pm
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