Sunday, August 19, 2012

Engaging Content for the History Flip

***This post was generously contributed by guest blogger Ryan Folmer.***

 
My old VoiceThread on the French Revolution

For the past several years I have been experimenting with different aspects of the flip model in my social studies classes. I think the key element of the model is to get students activated in the classroom (and throughout instruction) and to move away (as much as possible) from content delivery (something that new resources and technology can do just as well, or better.) I would much rather have my students learn an combination of content and skills through discussions, document analysis, historical investigations, projects and the like. This is really nothing new, John Dewey explored constructivist methods of education more than a century ago. Since that time, social constructivist theories and connectivist theories have expanded Dewey's ideas for the 21st century environment. As a result, the flip model brings together 21st century instruction techniques such as screencasting, social networking, and bring-your-own-technology and combines with with techniques such as project, problem, inquiry and passion-based learning.

Crash Course World History -  The French Revolution

As a result of the flip instruction model, a lot can be done in the history and social studies classroom. I began this process myself by moving to a more inquiry and project-based model in my world history classes and supplementing the content material by moving my traditional lectures to Voicethread for students to view on their own time. This worked pretty well, but I still had issues with students relying on lecture-based content delivery and my issues with overburdening students with homework.


History Teachers - "Revolution in France."

So, I continue to experiment and rethink how I will implement my instruction to best help all of my students. I know that my focus will further be on how authentic history learning can be employed both inside and outside of the classroom. I am particularly interested in reducing the amount of content consumed at home while at the same time making it more interesting. For my world history courses, this means utilizing one of my new favorite resources - Crash Course World History. The (what will soon be a series of 40) videos created by the team here do a great job covering the basics of most of what I want my students to know. I would also supplement this with the musical talents of the History Teachers - History for Music Lovers, a great set of topic specific videos based on recent pop hits.  It all comes back to the idea of teachers being great curators. As a result, I am thinking of reducing my VoiceThread screencasts to general overview of topics at the beginning of a unit, to topics not covered by the resources mentioned above, and for review purposes at the end of the unit. By bringing the other videos into VoiceThread or embedding them in Edmodo, I can still give my students a way to interact and ask questions of me. Plus, I know the creators of the videos listed above monitor their YouTube channels and answer student questions, adding another great interactive resource.

I think there are a lot of possibilites for increasing student engagement both with online content and what is done in the classroom. For more insights on this, read Tom Driscoll's post here.  In a bit of serendipity, we were thinking about similar issues at about the same time.



2 comments:

  1. Great post Ryan. Although creating your own content as a teacher is important, why not use other great resources that are out there as well?

    I was familiar with the music videos, but thanks for directing me to "crash course," looks great. I am actually providing the dark ages video to my APEH students as a refresher before diving into the Renaissance.

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  2. Thanks for this post. I am trying to create a student-centered environment as much as possible, and occasionally flipping the classroom is part of that process. I have found CrashCourse videos to be good, but they need a fair amount of stopping so that students can wrap their heads around the flood of info.

    May I use your voicethread in my 10th grade European History class as a resource? I am looking for things like this. I will be happy to share with you any creative ideas I can come up with for projects on this topic and others. I'm trying to think about asking students to analyze the role of the media in the French Revolution, then compare it to the ways that media tech is being used in revolutions right now...

    Thanks again!

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