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      It's not about seat time: Blending, flipping, and efficiency in active learning classrooms

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      Computers & Education
      Elsevier BV

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          Blended learning: Uncovering its transformative potential in higher education

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            Increased structure and active learning reduce the achievement gap in introductory biology.

            Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics instructors have been charged with improving the performance and retention of students from diverse backgrounds. To date, programs that close the achievement gap between students from disadvantaged versus nondisadvantaged educational backgrounds have required extensive extramural funding. We show that a highly structured course design, based on daily and weekly practice with problem-solving, data analysis, and other higher-order cognitive skills, improved the performance of all students in a college-level introductory biology class and reduced the achievement gap between disadvantaged and nondisadvantaged students--without increased expenditures. These results support the Carnegie Hall hypothesis: Intensive practice, via active-learning exercises, has a disproportionate benefit for capable but poorly prepared students.
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              Improved learning in a large-enrollment physics class.

              We compared the amounts of learning achieved using two different instructional approaches under controlled conditions. We measured the learning of a specific set of topics and objectives when taught by 3 hours of traditional lecture given by an experienced highly rated instructor and 3 hours of instruction given by a trained but inexperienced instructor using instruction based on research in cognitive psychology and physics education. The comparison was made between two large sections (N = 267 and N = 271) of an introductory undergraduate physics course. We found increased student attendance, higher engagement, and more than twice the learning in the section taught using research-based instruction.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Computers & Education
                Computers & Education
                Elsevier BV
                03601315
                September 2014
                September 2014
                : 78
                :
                : 227-236
                Article
                10.1016/j.compedu.2014.06.006
                67350819-5929-4d62-8c4e-0f8c75a63b25
                © 2014
                History

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