Enhancing Engagement in STEM Classrooms via the Project Based Inquiry Learning (5E) Model Suma Rajashankar, Ph.D. Department of Electrical Engineering Northern Illinois University.

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Transcript Enhancing Engagement in STEM Classrooms via the Project Based Inquiry Learning (5E) Model Suma Rajashankar, Ph.D. Department of Electrical Engineering Northern Illinois University.

Enhancing Engagement in STEM
Classrooms via the Project Based
Inquiry Learning (5E) Model
Suma Rajashankar, Ph.D.
Department of Electrical Engineering
Northern Illinois University
National STEM Crisis
 U.S. behind in student indicators.
 Foreign nationals ahead in jobs and
degrees.
 Urban students are falling behind.
 Many plans exist to address this.
 New national STEM Initiative addresses
programs and teachers.
Ranking of G8 countries: 10th grade math & problem solving
1st
2nd
OECD
Ranking Science
1st
10th
4th
15th
6th
7th
8th
Math
5th
3rd
5th
Reading
Problem
Solving
14th
15th 15th
18th
18th
20th
24th
25th
30th
2000 2003
Source: PISA, 2000, 2003
Systems
2000 2003
2000 2003
Courtesy of Cisco
24th
2003
STEM Pipeline
Mission Statement - Association for American
Universities (AAU)
Reforming the Undergraduate STEM Education
The AAU Initiative
The goal of the AAU Undergraduate STEM
Education Initiative is to help influence change in
the culture of STEM departments at AAU
universities so that they will use evidence-based,
student-centered, active, sustainable pedagogy in
their classes, particularly at the freshman and
sophomore levels.
AAU Report
Rationale
 Workforce needs → Competitiveness
 Desire for a scientifically-literate population
 New scholarship on what works in the classroom: evidence-based
teaching methods
 Several AAU institutions are already at the forefront of improving
STEM undergraduate education
AAU Report
Problems present…
 STEM completion rates not good
 Research universities don’t produce as many STEM majors
as other colleges and universities
 Evidence-based teaching methods are not widely adopted.
Why?
 Teaching (and learning) are not effectively evaluated and
rewarded
AAU Report
Degree Completion Report
AAU Report
Areas of STEM Reform
Recruitment/R
etention of
Women and
URM
 Pedagogy
 Faculty
Development
 Future Faculty
Development
(graduate
student training)
 Institutional/Stat
e/Federal Policy
Course
Content/
Curriculum
Graduate
Student
Training
 Course
content/curriculum
 K-12 Teacher
Development
 Workforce
Development
 Recruitment/retention
of underrepresented
student populations in
STEM (including
women and minorities)
National Report from The National
Academies !!
THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES




National Academy of Sciences
National Academy of Engineering
Institute of Medicine
National Research Council
National Report from The National
Academies !!
CURRENTLY: ~ 300,000
bachelor and associate degrees in
STEM fields annually in the U.S.
FUTURE NEEDS: 1 million more
STEM professionals in the next
decade than the U.S. will produce
at the current rate if the country is
to retain its historical preeminence
in science and technology.
“To meet this goal, the United States will
need to increase the number of students
who receive undergraduate STEM
degrees by about 34% annually over
current rates.”
SCENARIO: Fewer than 40% of
students who enter college intending
to major in a STEM field complete a
STEM degree.
SOLUTION: Increasing retention of
STEM majors from 40% to 50%
would generate three-quarters of the
1 million additional STEM degrees
over the next decade.
“Many student who abandon STEM
majors perform well in their
introductory courses and would make
valuable additions to the STEM
workforce.”
National Report from The National
Academies !!
Solution? - RETENTION!!
 Retaining more students in STEM majors is the lowest-cost,
fastest policy option to providing the STEM professionals
 This will not require expanding the number or size of
introductory courses, which are constrained by space and
resources at many colleges and universities.
RETENTION has Problems…
 Reasons for students leaving STEM (Push-Pull issue):
 Discouraged/loss of confidence due to low grades in early
years
 Morale is undermined by competitive STEM culture
 Curriculum overload, fast pace overwhelming
 Poor teaching by STEM faculty
 Inadequate advising or help with academic programs
 Loss of interest in STEM, i.e., turned of by “SCIENCE”
Reference: “Talk about Leaving: Why undergraduates leave the STEM disciplines? – Seymour and Hewitt, 1997
RETENTION has Problems…(Contd.)
RECRUITMENT AND RETENTION AT THE UNDERGRADUATE
LEVEL IN STEM DISCIPLINES IS AN ISSUE !!
April 2013, report by NSF shows:
 Recruitment and retention in the first two years in STEM
disciplines, specially in Physics is a problem.
 Many undergraduates come to college not well prepared
in physics and mathematics, a problem that is partially
linked to K-12 STEM teacher preparation.
 The freshmen physics curriculum has remained static, is
often not very exciting.
Need for 21st Century skills, Why?
20th Century
21st Century
Number of
Jobs:
1 – 2 Jobs
10 – 15 Jobs
Job
Requirement:
Mastery of
One Field
Critical Thinking
Across
Disciplines
Teaching
Model:
Subject
Matter
Mastery
Integration of 21st
Century Skills into
Subject Matter
Mastery
Assessment
Model:
Subject
Matter
Mastery
Integration of 21st
Century Skills into
Subject Matter
Mastery
Courtesy of Dorrington Group
20th & 21st Century skills framework!!
20th Century Education Model
21st Century Learning Model
Ref: www.spokanestem.org
STEM tied to acquisition of 21st Century
skills!
Ref: www.spokanestem.org
Relation between Engagement &
Retention!
Engagement
RETENTION
Student’s “Engagement” in Engineering –
University of Ulster, UK Report
80.0%
70.0%
60.0%
50.0%
Yes
40.0%
No
30.0%
20.0%
10.0%
.0%
First
Second
Final
All years
Student’s “Engagement” in Engineering –
University of Ulster, UK Report (Contd.)
How many hours do students spend on their
studies outside timetabled classes?
Typical class contact (hours):
18 – First Year
18 – Second Year
15 – Final Year
Student’s “Engagement” in Engineering –
University of Ulster, UK Report (Contd…)
Survey of easy to learn situations/activities!!
Student’s Survey Responses – University of
Ulster, UK Report (Contd…)
Material is more interesting
when we see its relevance.
Lecturers should relate
lecture material using real-life
examples/anecdotes.
Assignments and
exercises should be
related to ‘real’
engineering.
1. Real-life assignments,
engineering activities
Company visits
- to see what engineering is about
- what jobs engineers do.
Science and maths is easier
to understand when we see
where it is used in everyday
situations.
Student’s Survey Responses – University of
Ulster, UK Report (Contd…)
Like to feel that our lecturers
care about us and make an
effort to be helpful.
Good if he/she can
relate classroom
material to real-life
engineering problems.
Humorous
2. Lecturer attributes
Approachable,
available outside
class and provides
good feedback on
our assignments.
We like a lecturer that
encourages interaction
and allows us to ask
questions.
Classes are more
interesting if the lecturer
uses a variety of media,
e.g. videos, software,
demonstrations.
Student’s Survey Responses – University of
Ulster, UK Report (Contd…)
Enjoyable – provided we
have clear outline of what’s
expected.
We like ‘shared
experience’ of working
together in small
group tutorial. Makes
you feel part of a
team.
Good if all team
members
contribute equally.
3. Team-working
We see the benefit of
‘team-work’ for
industry.
Put good students
together in
groups.
We don’t like group work in
final year.
Learning Styles
What is Authentic Learning?
Authentic Learning is an approach to teaching in which
 the students work on realistic problems
 participate in activities that solve real life problems
 create products that have real life meaning.
The learning environments are multidisciplinary, similar to a real
world application ( managing a city, building a house, flying an
airplane, setting a budget, solving a crime).
Characteristics of Authentic Learning
 Learning is real-world oriented
 Learning is often interdisciplinary.
 The classroom is learner centered and allows for a variety of learning
styles.
 Students have ownership of their learning.
 Instruction uses hand-on approaches
 Learning is active and student driven.
 Teachers act as coaches or learning facilitators.
 Learning uses real-time data, which students investigate and from
which they draw conclusions.
 Team working important aspect.
 Students produce a product that is directed toward a real audience.
Comparison of the two forms of
Authentic Learning
Project-based learning (PBL) Project-based Inquiry learning (PBIL)
•
•
•
•
•
•
Essential Question
21st Century skills not
primary focus
Presentation an
option
Multidisciplinary
Field Trips are optional
5E instructional
strategy optional
• Core problem embedded in
scenario
• 21st Century skills primary focus
• Oral and written presentations
required
• Multidisciplinary with a focus on
STEM connections
• 5E Instructional Strategy
required
• Field Trips are required
5E’s Instructional Model
Engage
 Explore
 Explain
 Extend
 Evaluate


The 5E model was originally proposed by the BSCS
(Biological Science Curriculum Study)
5E Learning Model
Flow of Core-problem
Engage
Explore
Explain
Extend
Evaluate
•
•
•
•
•
• Guide
students to
think, plan,
investigate
and organize
and collect
information
• Analyze the
learning and
deepen
conceptual
understanding
• Expand
• Solidify
• Understand
and apply to
real-world
situations
• Informal
and formal
modalities
Focus
Attention
Stimulate
Think
Access prior
knowledge
5E Learning Model
- Planning tool for Instructors
 Proposed by Roger Bybee and colleagues at Biological
Sciences Curriculum Study (BSCS)
 This model has been used to develop many BSCS
curricular materials and textbooks for biology teaching
and learning as well as for aspiring k-12 teachers.
 This model is based on both:
 Conceptual change model of learning
 Constructivist view of learning.
Strategies for using the 5E Model to
align teaching with learning!!
Instructor dilemmas:
“I have heard about all these innovative teaching strategies being used in
biology, but I just don’t know where to start to change from only lecturing”
“I feel like I have all sorts of teaching tools that I have learned about,
but I cannot figure out when to use which ones”
Potential 5E Strategy: Design class sessions to have at least two
components of the 5E model, even if you can’t hit all five in a given
class meeting.
Reference: Kimberly Tanner, CBE Life Science Education, 2010 9(3), p159-164
Strategies for using the 5E Model to
align teaching with learning (Contd.)!!
Instructor dilemmas:
“I don’t have time to connect the biology I teach to real life. I have too
much to cover to do that and its not needed – majors are already inherently
interested in the biology I am teaching”
“What I'm about to tell students is not something they're going to have
any prior experience with, so it doesn't make sense to ask students to think
about what they know before I start lecturing.”
Potential 5E Strategy: Start your class session with something
that engages students and/or elicits their prior knowledge.
Reference: Kimberly Tanner, CBE Life Science Education, 2010 9(3), p159-164
Strategies for using the 5E Model in
Engineering!!
 This 5E model is a wonderful tool that could be integrated
within any existing course delivery in engineering at the
freshman and the sophomore levels.
 The 5Es provide the framework for utilizing everyday
engineering examples to progress around the learning
cycle. In this process, students are engaged by
demonstration of an everyday example.
Reference: E.A. Patterson et.al., European Journal of Engineering Education, 36(3), 2011, p 211-224
Everyday Examples in Engineering E3
5E Model embedded!!
VIBRATING RULER
 For Junior Dynamics
 Topic: Free and Forced Vibration
Activity:
 Clamp one end on the bench and flick the free end of the
ruler so that it vibrates. Slide it onto the bench so that the
pitch of the noise changes the frequency will go up.
 Show the students how to equate kinetic and strainenergy
to find the natural frequency.
 Ask students to repeat the analysis for a whip aerial with a
ball on the tip.
Engage Engineering !!
www.engageengineering.org
What is ENGAGE?
www.engageengineering.org
 Extension Services Project funded by the National Science
Foundation
 The overarching goal of ENGAGE is to increase the capacity of
engineering schools to retain undergraduate students by facilitating
the implementation of three research-based strategies to improve
student day-to-day classroom and educational experience.
 The ENGAGE project team and participating Engineering Schools
work together to improve student day-to-day classroom and
educational experience, and to increase engineering schools'
capacity to retain undergraduate students.
What is ENGAGE? (Contd.)
As a result of the project, engineering schools are expected to:
 Integrate Everyday Examples in Engineering (E3s) into
selected ENGAGE targeted courses
 Identify students with weak spatial skills and effectively
support student spatial visualization skill development
 Effectively build and support faculty knowledge and skill to
better engage and interact with students inside and outside
of the classroom
 Establish processes to sustain project efforts
ENGAGE Schools!!
 70 schools are currently participating in this program
Mini-grant Opportunities in ENGAGE !!
Conclusion
 In order to increase the recruitment and retention of students
in the STEM disciplines, 21st century skills must be
incorporated.
 Retention in STEM disciplines will increase if students are
“Engaged”
 To enhance Engagement, 5E Instructional strategy needs to
be implemented
 5E Learning model is centered around active learning which
eventually leads to greater engagement in the STEM discipline
resulting in higher retention rates.
 All lesson plans for Everyday Examples in Engineering (E3)
from ENGAGE program are prepared using the principle of the
5E’s
 All E3 lesson plans, solutions and topics are listed by course
area in: www.engageengineering.org
Questions?
THANK YOU !!