Showing posts with label pedagogy curriculum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pedagogy curriculum. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

YOU figure it out!


I've been poking around in the "Problem-based Learning" literature for a writing project, and I mostly like what I see. The philosophy seems to be that good learning experiences can be inspired by presenting students with open-ended problems, and then helping them figure out pathways to possible solutions.

I ran into an interesting/exciting example on Twitter this morning: Casey Rutherford (@rutherfordcasey) posted a short slide show that he's using on his first day (note: the slide show uses SlideRocket to run, and I hope the link works for everyone).

Isn't that cool? Can you imagine walking into a class and seeing those four short slides, and then trying to tackle that problem all period?

I wonder if we could use this model in psychology classes, and I'd love to hear any examples you all know about. Here's my first attempt (for the memory unit)

- Slide one: The Memory Challenge
- Slide two: The goal: Figure out how many items you can memorize from a list, and decide what factors influence your ability to remember them.
- Slide three: Time frame: You have 25 minutes to do what you need to do to accomplish this task. Work with the group at your table.
- Slide four: GO

By tackling this challenge, students may uncover their own empirical data for "the magic number 7, plus or minus 2", serial position effect, chunking, mnemonic devices, massed/distributed learning, selective attention, and probably a bunch of other memory concepts that I can't even anticipate. What do you think? Does this kind of open-ended problem solving have a place in the psychology classroom?



posted by Rob McEntarffer

Monday, August 17, 2009

Today in the History of Psychology

Warren R. Street of Central Washington University in conjunction with the APA, has designed an online database of important historical events in the history of Psychology.

The database can be searched by date or keyword/phrase and is located at http://www.cwu.edu/~warren/today.html

This might be the perfect way to assign a history of psychology activity for your students. Please let me (Kent Korek - kkorek@germantown.k12.wi.us) know if you have developed such a project and would be willing to post it on this blog.