In traditional teaching as we have known
it, teachers talk and learners listen. Students acquire their knowledge
in the classroom, while analysing, evaluating and applying what they
have learned takes place elsewhere — if at all.
By
contrast, when students obtain their first exposure to new material
outside of the classroom — through reading or watching videos — and then
add value to that knowledge in the classroom through discussion and
reflection, creative thinking and problem solving, this is known as
“flipping” the classroom.
The flipping engages students
in purposeful and enjoyable learning, where the focus moves from just
being able to remember and regurgitate what they had been told to
understanding and applying the knowledge. Happily this is absolutely the
approach being adopted in our new curriculum framework.
Not
least in higher education, but throughout the years of schooling,
flipping the classroom stimulates active learning in class.
It
allows faculty to provide more personalised attention and learners to
work at their own pace, thus accommodating slow, average, and gifted
learners in the same class. It also allows faculty to focus on higher
level and higher impact learning, and as the classes become
learner-centred it helps them manage ones that are large or practical.
The
increase in quantity, sophistication and accessibility of educational
technologies has opened up extraordinary possibilities for creating and
sharing content and for accelerating and deepening learning.
Technology
supports flipped classrooms through capturing content for learners to
access at their own convenience, and it can present learning materials
as audio, graphics, text or video.
It offers learners opportunities for interaction and
collaboration; provides on-demand content and stimulation to response,
together with anonymous and immediate feedback; captures data on how
learners are progressing; and allows synchronous and asynchronous
engagements.
More and more e-solutions exist to support
the flipping of classes, facilitating the sharing of files, videos,
e-books and collaboration.
So why, given all these benefits, are we not flipping our local classrooms? (Which by and large we are not!)
Our
dominant teaching method remains one where teachers or lecturers
perform as ‘the sage on the stage, the GOD (Guru on Duty)’.
They
justify remaining in their ‘chalk-and-talk’ comfort zone by feeling
they are behaving “properly” and “professionally”, the way their role
models did, and so they hold on to this approach rather than becoming
facilitators and guides.
In
the “one-to-many” style we are told that knowledge transfers from the
lecturer’s mouth to the learners’ ears without going through the brains
of either.
A lack of access to appropriate books or technology certainly contributes to the slow progress towards the flipped classroom.
And
adequate bandwidth and online content are needed to access e-learning
platforms. Plus both faculty and learners must develop both the
competence and the confidence to work in this way.
Unfortunately
though, a big cause of the slow uptake of flipped classrooms is
resistance from faculty — from the “lecturers”. For them the flipping
requires a willingness to transform how they conduct themselves, and to
invest in preparing for the radically new approach.
Today’s
learners are all digitally connected, so there is a greater challenge
for faculty to keep ahead of them — and moonlighting at multiple
universities precludes having time to prepare for such inverted
learning.
As at a few other local institutions, at KCA
University (where, for full disclosure, I chair the council) we’ve
started flipping our classrooms.
Faculty are being
helped to adapt to the new approaches, and students are provided with
high-speed Internet which allows remote access to library resources and
thus independent research.
The
university has joined Eduroam, a facility provided through the Kenya
Education Network, allowing users to log in to any member university.
And
the library is a member of the Kenya Library and Information Services
Consortium, where students access online journals and e-books.
Champions
have also been identified to lead other colleagues in flipping their
classes, and a Carnegie Africa Diaspora Fellow has come to build faculty
capacity.
Like with the standard gauge railway, the
train bearing the flipped classroom has left the station. Elsewhere it
has been gathering speed, and now we too must board it in big numbers.
Quickly and boldly.
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