Amongst the major science research journals, Science magazine has consistently been the most prominent in flying the flag for science education. I was very interested, therefore, in an Editorial by Carl Wieman in the September 4th 2009 issue of the magazine. In his piece Galvanising Science Departments, Wieman describes some fairly radical innovations in Science Education [...]
September 5, 2009
Categories: assessment, critical thinking, education, learning, modularisation, paper review, pedagogy, problem-solving, science, teaching . Tags: Carl Wieman, evidence-based teaching, how students learn, Science magazine, University of British Columbia, University of Colorado . Author: Chris Willmott . Comments: 4 Comments
Professor Melanie Cooper from Clemson University, South Carolina came to Leicester’s Learning and Teaching in the Sciences conference as part of a UK tour sponsored by the Physical Sciences Centre of the Higher Education Academy. In her talk, Using technology to investigate and improve student problem-solving strategies, Prof Cooper began by drawing an important distinction between problems and exercises. Often when [...]
June 6, 2007
Categories: Melanie Cooper, Ron Stevens, artificial neural network, conference report, critical thinking, education, group work, hidden Markov modelling, immex, learning, learning trajectories, pedagogy, problem-solving, science, teaching . . Author: Chris Willmott . Comments: 1 Comment