Active Learning strategies for lectures

Strategies to incorporate problems into your lecture
  • Draw on Experiences
    Connect new concepts to students’ experiences, fostering meaningful understanding. Using relevant experiences for students enables them to connect the material to the real-world. Using real-world examples that relate to the topic makes the topic familiar to students.
    For example, when discussing supply and demand, ask them to consider what they experienced either themselves or via friends, when Taylor Swift Era’s tour tickets are released.
  • Reverse Example Approach
    Start with real-world examples or problems before introducing and linking abstract concepts to the real-world example. This will help students connect the abstract concepts to the real-world or help them visualize the concepts. For example, beginning the lecture by introducing a natural disaster such as the Black Saturday bushfires in Australia, and using it to contextualize the concepts of post-traumatic stress disorder and post traumatic growth.
  • Case Studies 
    Analyze and dissect real-world case studies relevant to the subject, allowing students to witness the manifestation of theoretical concepts in practical scenarios. For example, you can choose a case study from the perspective of a third party/client/patient, an explanatory case study where you look at the impact of a phenomenon, tactic or strategy or an implementation case study where you look at the “how”, as well as the impact.
What does this look like in practice?

Start of lecture

Begin the lecture with a (real-world) problem that aligns with the learning outcomes. This can be anything from a dilemma, an issue or debate topic. It is especially helpful to incorporate current events in these problems.

Middle of lecture

Build in moments throughout the lecture where students can bring the content together with the real-world problem eg discuss how specific parts of the lecture content helps to solve the problem, quiz them on which features of the event align with the features of the content, brainstorm (using Wooclap) the impact of an effective/ineffective solution.

End

Finish your lecture with a provocative question/one-question quiz or minute paper about the content, the initial problem posed and proposed solutions that were discussed during the lecture (Bok; Universiteit Gent).