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AAC&U GEMs: Exemplar Practice

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on April 12, 2014

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A while back, I wrote about my early experiences as a member of the Digital Working Group for the AAC&U General Education Maps and Markers (GEMs) initiative and promised that I would do my homework for the group in public. Today I will make good on that promise. The homework is to write-up an exemplar […]

Efficacy, Adaptive Learning, and the Flipped Classroom, Part II

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on April 9, 2014

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In my last post, I described positive but mixed results of an effort by MSU’s psychology department to flip and blend their classroom: On the 30-item comprehensive exam, students in the redesigned sections performed significantly better (84% improvement) compared to the traditional comparison group (54% improvement). Students in the redesigned course demonstrated significantly more improvement […]

Efficacy, Adaptive Learning, and the Flipped Classroom

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on April 2, 2014

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Speaking of efficacy and the complexity of measuring it, I had an interesting conversation the other day with Danae Hudson, a professor of Psychology at Missouri State University, about a course redesign effort that she participated in. The initial contact came from a P.R. firm hired by Pearson. Phil and I get a lot of […]

Comment from member of research team on USA Today flipped classroom article

By Phil Hill. Posted on October 25, 2013

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Update 10/26: We now have Rachel Levy and Nancy Lape (who was the researcher interviewed by USA Today) both agreeing with Darryl’s comments. That’s three of the four members of the research team. While I do not claim to understand how the reporter developed her story line (I have asked for comment), it is quite […]

A response to USA Today article on Flipped Classroom research

By Phil Hill. Posted on October 22, 2013

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Update 10/25: Bumped comment from Darryl Yong, a member of the research team, into its own post here. Update 10/26: We now have Rachel Levy and Nancy Lape (who was the researcher interviewed by USA Today) both agreeing with Darryl’s comments. That’s three of the four members of the research team. While I do not claim to understand how the […]
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