Dynamic Lecturing


What is dynamic lecturing?

  • Lecturing has been the main teaching strategy for a long time; however, in recent years there has been a shift to incorporate active learning in the classroom for a more student-centered approach (Harrington & Zakrajsek, 2017). Some faculty have misinterpreted this shift to active learning to mean that the lecture should be abandoned. However, lecturing continues to be an important method for disseminating course content to students, and it should not be abandoned, but instead made more effective by being dynamic and interactive.
  • Dynamic lecturing is a research-based teaching strategy that combines lecturing with active learning strategies (Harrington & Zakrajsek, 2017).
  • Lecturing and active learning do not have to be exclusive.
  • Lecturing can be more effective when combined with active learning strategies. If active learning strategies are incorporated into lectures, high-level engagement and achievement for students can be achieved.

Why are lectures important?

  • Help novice learners and early undergraduate students understand key content
  • Help increase cognitive and emotional engagement when there is a good story
  • Help students build foundational knowledge to engage in active learning strategies for application and integration

What are different types of lectures?

  • Formal or paper-reading lectures
  • Storytelling
  • Discussion-based
  • Visually-enhanced
  • Demonstration
  • Online
  • Interactive

What does dynamic lecturing look like?

  • It does not look like you talking all the time.
  • It does not look like you reading from a script.
  • It does not look like repetitive information.
  • It does not look like one way communication.
  • It does not look like passive learning.
  • It looks like interaction between you and your students.
  • It looks like students are involved with you and their classmates.
  • It looks like students are engaged in learning.
  • It looks like you are monitoring the audience's attentiveness.
  • It look like you are interested in what you are talking about.
  • It looks like there is value in what students know.

Why should I incorporate dynamic lecturing in my class?

  • According to Zakrajsek, students have a cognitive load that is similar to a working RAM, which is the amount of information the brain can process at any given moment (Stachowiak, 2017). When you are teaching as an expert to novices, you are disseminating a plethora of information to students. Students reach a moment where they feel full and they cannot do anymore, possibly every 15-25 minutes. These are the moments where using an active learning strategy in the middle of a lecture will help you reduce students’ cognitive load.

How can I enhance my lectures?

  1. Activate students’ prior knowledge
  2. Capture attention and emphasize important points
  3. Encourage students to make content meaningful through examples
  4. Provide reflection opportunities
  5. Create opportunities for retrieval practice

(1) Activate Prior Knowledge

  • Pre-test
  • What do I know? Turn and Talk (interleave)
  • Mini-lesson reading strategies
  • Mini-lesson prior to assigned reading
  • Brain dump

(2) Capture Attention and Emphasize Main Points

  • Use a hook or attention getter
  • Identify big ideas and learning objectives
  • Show passion and use your voice
  • Use prediction and preview strategies

(3) Make-it-Meaningful through Examples

  • Case studies
  • Make-it-meaningful teams (interleave)
  • Think-pair-share with self-explanation
  • Concept maps
  • Invent the quiz

(4) Reflection Opportunities

  • One-minute paper
  • News report
  • Review and compare notes
  • Entry ticket
  • Exit ticket

(5) Retrieval Practice

  • Interleaving quiz
  • Interactive quiz
  • Brief presentation
  • One-minute elaboration
  • One-minute paper

Podcast

Dynamic Lecturing WITH TODD ZAKRAJSEK

http://teachinginhighered.com/podcast/dynamic-lecturing/

References and HELPFUL RESOURCES

Baeten, M., Dochy, F., & Struyven, K. (2013). The effects of different learning environments on students’ motivation for learning and their achievement. British Journal of Educational Psychology, 83, 484-501.

Ebner, M. (2009). Interactive lecturing by integrating mobile devices and micro-blogging in higher education. Journal of Computing and Information Technology, 17(4), 371. doi:10.2498/cit.1001382

Freeman, S., Eddy, S. L., McDonough, M., Smith, M. K., Okoroafor, N., Jordt, H., & Wenderoth, M. P. (2014). Active learning increases student performance in science, engineering, and mathematics. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 111(23), 8410-8415. doi:10.1073/pnas.1319030111

Gülpinar, M. A., & Ye en, B. Ç. (2005). Interactive lecturing for meaningful learning in large groups. Medical Teacher, 27(7), 590-594. doi:10.1080/01421590500136139

Harrington, C., & Zakrajsek, T. (2017). Dynamic lecturing: Research-based strategies to enhance lecture effectiveness. Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing.

Heitzmann, R. (2010). 10 suggestions for enhancing lecturing. The Education Digest, 75(9), 50.

Jensen, S. A. (2011). In-class versus online video lectures: Similar learning outcomes, but a preference for in-class. Teaching of Psychology, 38, 298-302.

Lang, J. M. (2017). Small teaching: Everyday lessons from the science of learning. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

Lee, H. S., & Anderson, J. R. (2013). Student learning: What’s instruction go to do with it? Annual Review of Psychology, 64, 445-469.

Lordly, D. (2007). Once upon a time…storytelling to enhance teaching and learning. Canadian Journal of Dietetic Practice and Research, 68, 30-35.

Mayorga, E. P., Bekerman, J. G., & Palis, A. G. (2014). Webinar software: A tool for developing more effective lectures (online or in-person). Middle East African Journal of Ophthalmology, 21(2), 123. doi:10.4103/0974-9233.129756

Merideno Labayen, I., Antón, R., & G. Prada, J. (2015). The influence of a non-linear lecturing approach on student attention: Implementation and assessment. Ingeniería e Investigación, 35(3), 115-120. doi:10.15446/ing.investig.v35n3.49644

Stachowiak B. [producer]. (2017, January 29). Dynamic lecturing with Todd Zakrajsek [podcast]. Retrieved from http://teachinginhighered.com/podcast/dynamic-lecturing/

Tiwari, A., Lai, P., So, M., & Yuen, K. (2006). A comparison of the effects of problem‐based learning and lecturing on the development of students' critical thinking. Medical Education, 40(6), 547-554. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2929.2006.02481.x

Weimer, M. (2017). Interleaving: An evidenced-based strategy. Faculty Focus: Higher Ed Teaching Strategies for Magna Publications.