Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.

Difference between revisions of "Decoding group activities in interactive teaching (paper)"

(Changed categories.)
(+Abstract)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
==Abstract==
 +
We report on the analysis of a decoding interview which aims at identifying students’ bottlenecks related to group activities. The interview allows making transparent the subtle sequence of individual and collaborative parts in such activities and to describe the mental operations that students have to perform in order to get started with problem solving in group tasks. We also report on metaphors which the interviewed instructor created in order to illustrate what he himself would and would not be doing in group work. These metaphors when communicated to students have the potential to support them in passing their difficulties related to group activities.
 +
 
==Bibliographic data==
 
==Bibliographic data==
 
Dröschler, S., Riegler, P., & Pace, D. (2017). Decoding group activities in interactive teaching. In: K. Mårtensson et al. (eds.): Transforming patterns through the scholarschip of teaching and learning  
 
Dröschler, S., Riegler, P., & Pace, D. (2017). Decoding group activities in interactive teaching. In: K. Mårtensson et al. (eds.): Transforming patterns through the scholarschip of teaching and learning  
==External reference==
+
==External source==
 
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/Droeschler_etal.pdf
 
https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/Droeschler_etal.pdf
 
[[Category:PublishedWork]]
 
[[Category:PublishedWork]]
Line 8: Line 11:
 
[[Category:Riegler, P]]
 
[[Category:Riegler, P]]
 
[[Category:Pace, D]]
 
[[Category:Pace, D]]
 +
[[Category:2017]]

Latest revision as of 23:31, 22 November 2024

Abstract

We report on the analysis of a decoding interview which aims at identifying students’ bottlenecks related to group activities. The interview allows making transparent the subtle sequence of individual and collaborative parts in such activities and to describe the mental operations that students have to perform in order to get started with problem solving in group tasks. We also report on metaphors which the interviewed instructor created in order to illustrate what he himself would and would not be doing in group work. These metaphors when communicated to students have the potential to support them in passing their difficulties related to group activities.

Bibliographic data

Dröschler, S., Riegler, P., & Pace, D. (2017). Decoding group activities in interactive teaching. In: K. Mårtensson et al. (eds.): Transforming patterns through the scholarschip of teaching and learning

External source

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/Droeschler_etal.pdf