| Literature DB >> 25976654 |
Travis J Lund1, Matthew Pilarz2, Jonathan B Velasco3, Devasmita Chakraverty4, Kaitlyn Rosploch3, Molly Undersander3, Marilyne Stains5.
Abstract
Researchers, university administrators, and faculty members are increasingly interested in measuring and describing instructional practices provided in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) courses at the college level. Specifically, there is keen interest in comparing instructional practices between courses, monitoring changes over time, and mapping observed practices to research-based teaching. While increasingly common observation protocols (Reformed Teaching Observation Protocol [RTOP] and Classroom Observation Protocol in Undergraduate STEM [COPUS]) at the postsecondary level help achieve some of these goals, they also suffer from weaknesses that limit their applicability. In this study, we leverage the strengths of these protocols to provide an easy method that enables the reliable and valid characterization of instructional practices. This method was developed empirically via a cluster analysis using observations of 269 individual class periods, corresponding to 73 different faculty members, 28 different research-intensive institutions, and various STEM disciplines. Ten clusters, called COPUS profiles, emerged from this analysis; they represent the most common types of instructional practices enacted in the classrooms observed for this study. RTOP scores were used to validate the alignment of the 10 COPUS profiles with reformed teaching. Herein, we present a detailed description of the cluster analysis method, the COPUS profiles, and the distribution of the COPUS profiles across various STEM courses at research-intensive universities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25976654 PMCID: PMC4477734 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.14-10-0168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Abbreviated definitions of COPUS codes
| Student codes | Instructor codes | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| AnQ-S | Student answering instructor’s question | PQ | Posing nonrhetorical, nonclicker question |
| SQ | Student asking a question | AnQ-I | Answering student question |
| CG | Discuss CQ in groups | CQ | Asking a clicker question (CQ) |
| WG | Work on worksheet in groups | FUp | Follow-up on CQ or activity |
| OG | Other group activities | W-I | Instructor waiting |
| L | Listening to instructor | Lec | Lecturing |
| Ind | Individual thinking/problem solving | RtW | Real-time writing on board, etc. |
| Prd | Making a prediction about a demo, experiment | MG | Moving through class, guiding work |
| WC | Whole-class discussion | 1o1 | One-on-one extended discussion with student(s) |
| T/Q | Test or quiz | D/V | Showing/conducting a demo, experiment, etc. |
| SP | Student presentation | Adm | Administration |
| W-S | Students waiting | O-I | Other |
| O-S | Other |
Number of observed class periods with indicated characteristics
| Characteristics | Number of class periods | Number of faculty membersa |
|---|---|---|
| Department | ||
| Chemistry | 134 | 39 |
| Biology | 80 | 17 |
| Physics | 16 | 5 |
| Mathematics | 11 | 4 |
| Other | 28 | 8 |
| Course level | ||
| Freshman undergraduate | 88 | 20 |
| Sophomore undergraduate | 75 | 20 |
| Upper-division undergraduate | 50 | 19 |
| Graduate | 56 | 19 |
| Class size | ||
| 1–25 students | 69 | 25 |
| 26–50 students | 48 | 15 |
| 51–100 students | 53 | 14 |
| 101–150 students | 34 | 11 |
| >150 students | 65 | 16 |
| Classroom type | ||
| Fixed seating | 177 | 50 |
| Nonfixed desks | 45 | 16 |
| Tables | 47 | 17 |
| Years of faculty experience | ||
| 0–1 prior years as faculty member | 78 | 28 |
| 2–5 prior years as faculty member | 40 | 11 |
| 6+ prior years as faculty member | 151 | 36 |
| Observation type | ||
| Nonworkshop faculty | 68 | 21 |
| Workshop faculty | ||
| Preworkshop | 81 | 31 |
| Postworkshop | 120 | 45 |
aSome faculty members were recorded more than once (N = 24) and in different courses (N = 4) across a 2-yr period; therefore, the total number of faculty members per characteristic may be greater than the total number of individual faculty members involved in the study (N = 73).
Average percentage of 2-min intervals per class period containing each of the COPUS codes
| Students | Instructor | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Codes | Average | SD | Codes | Average | SD |
| L | 95% | 10% | Lec | 81% | 20% |
| Ind | 3% | 8% | RtW | 40% | 37% |
| CG | 7% | 13% | FUp | 14% | 18% |
| WG | 1% | 7% | PQ | 23% | 18% |
| OG | 4% | 11% | CQ | 9% | 15% |
| GW | 13% | 18% | AnQ-I | 13% | 13% |
| AnQ-S | 21% | 17% | MG | 3% | 8% |
| SQ | 11% | 12% | 1o1 | 3% | 8% |
| WC | 1% | 5% | D/V | 3% | 6% |
| Prd | 0% | 2% | Adm | 6% | 6% |
| SP | 0% | 2% | W-I | 12% | 16% |
| T/Q | 1% | 5% | O-I | 3% | 7% |
| W-S | 2% | 4% | |||
| O-S | 2% | 4% | |||
The eight COPUS codes used for the cluster analysis that lead to the 10 COPUS profiles
| Student codes | Instructor codes | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| AnQ-S | Student answering instructor’s question | CQ | Asking a clicker question |
| SQ | Student asking a question | FUp | Follow-up on CQ or activity |
| GWa | Students working in group though various means (worksheet, clicker, others) | Lec | Lecturing |
| RtW | Real-time writing on board, etc. | ||
| MG | Moving through class, guiding work | ||
aGW is not a code in the original set of 25 COPUS codes; it is a new code that groups the original COPUS codes WG, CG, and OG.
COPUS profile characteristicsa
Comparisons of categorization of RTOP scores in prior studies with the average RTOP scores of each COPUS profiles
Figure 1.Distribution of RTOP scores and COPUS instructional styles across single weeks of instruction. In this figure, each data point represents one of the 269 class periods observed in this study. Each vertical stack of data points contains the two to three class periods (M/W/F or T/Th) observed during each of our 102 weeklong classroom visits. Scanning horizontally along different RTOP scores illustrates that the same RTOP score can often encompass different COPUS instructional styles. The inset, which is an enlargement of a small portion of the figure, presents the class period data from three of the weeklong classroom visits; the vertical variation in class period characteristics illustrates that the same instructor may (or may not) teach using very different instructional styles within the same week.
Figure 2.Distribution of the four instructional styles by (a) disciplines, (b) course level, (c) class size, (d) classroom physical layout, and (e) faculty teaching experience. N refers to the total number of class periods that fell into the specific category.