Read more
This book provides evidence-informed and practical advice on how to design, teach, and facilitate hands-on, experiential learning in practical higher education settings.
With rich case studies and carefully considered analysis tasks, all underpinned by research evidence, it explores the functional aspects of teaching outside of regular classroom environments. Designed to enable university teachers to adapt strategies for teaching confidently and effectively, this must-read text focusses on enhancing learning and avoiding pitfalls whilst allowing students to develop and recognise the skills needed to excel in their chosen discipline.
This book also provides:
Reflection Points to enable application of the ideas into teaching practice,
Action Summaries that distil the main recommendations into easily applicable solutions,
Further Reading sections to allow for further exploration of key ideas.
Practical and evidence-informed, the strategies within this book are useful for all educators teaching in practical settings including projects, labs, studios, in the field, and in practice placements.
List of contents
PART I 1. Introduction 2. How Students Develop Disciplinary Expertise 3. What Students Learn from Labs, Studios, Projects, and Fieldwork PART II 4. Teaching, Not Telling: Using Questions 5. Providing Feedback on Students’ Practical Work 6. Explaining and Demonstrating to Students in Practical Settings 7. Managing Relationships with a Class PART III 8. Research Findings about the Thinking that Gives Rise to Learning 9. Research Findings about the Contexts of Learning 10. Becoming a Better Teacher for Practical Settings
About the author
Roland Tormey is a teacher and researcher in learning sciences and leads the Teaching Support Centre at the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland.
Siara Isaac is a teaching advisor at the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland.
Cécile Hardebolle is a teaching advisor and learning scientist at the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland.
Ingrid Le Duc is a teaching advisor at the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and teaches university pedagogy at the University of Bern, Switzerland.
Summary
This book provides evidence-informed and practical advice on how to design, teach, and facilitate hands-on, experiential learning in practical higher education settings.