| Literature DB >> 34306968 |
Alexandra C Lau1, Makenna Martin2, Adriana Corrales2, Chandra Turpen3, Fred Goldberg2, Edward Price4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While many research-based instructional strategies in STEM have been developed, faculty need support in implementing and sustaining use of these strategies. A number of STEM faculty professional development programs aim to provide such pedagogical support, and it is necessary to understand the activity and learning process for faculty in these settings. In this paper, a taxonomy for describing the learning opportunities in faculty (online) learning community meetings is presented. Faculty learning communities, meeting either in-person or (increasingly) online, are a common form of professional development. They aim to develop the pedagogical and reflective skills of participants through regular meetings centered on conversations about teaching and learning.Entities:
Keywords: Faculty (online) learning communities; Faculty professional development; Opportunities for learning; Research-based instructional strategies; Tool development
Year: 2021 PMID: 34306968 PMCID: PMC8285718 DOI: 10.1186/s40594-021-00301-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J STEM Educ ISSN: 2196-7822
Summary of the versions of the TxOTL and the FOLC meetings on which each version was tested
| Version | FOLC meetings applied |
|---|---|
| V 1.0 ( | 1 NextGenPET FOLC meeting (meeting A) |
| V 1.1 | 3 NextGenPET FOLC meetings (meetings B–D) |
| V 1.2 | 2 NFW-FOLC meetings |
| V 1.3 | 2 NextGenPET FOLC meetings (meetings A and B) |
| V 2.0 | 0 FOLC meetings; feedback gathered from member-checking interviews |
| V 2.1 | N/A |
Fig. 1Depiction of the main structural elements of the taxonomy for describing opportunities to learn (the TxOTL). Meeting segment category and concept development help describe the content of a conversation, while the communicative approach describes how people engage in the conversation. Together, these three elements describe the opportunity to learn provided by a conversation
Fig. 2Detailed overview of the taxonomy for describing opportunities to learn (TxOTL) in FOLC meetings. A meeting segment is coded for communicative approach, concept development, and meeting segment category. Communicative approach is described by subcodes detailing who is talking and how perspectives (ideas) are considered. In the taxonomy, coding for concept development is restricted to pedagogical concepts; if it is determined that pedagogical concept development occurred in a segment, that segment gets labeled with the meeting segment category of Developing a Pedagogical Concept. If there is no pedagogical concept developed, the segment gets labeled as the appropriate one of the other 7 meeting segment categories. The dashed arrows indicate that the OTL in a meeting segment can be broadly characterized by the segment’s meeting category. The solid bracket signifies that in order to describe an OTL most accurately and in detail, all three taxonomy elements must be considered
Examples of mono discourse, dialogic discourse with low-level interanimation of ideas, and dialogic discourse with high-level interanimation of ideas
| How ideas are discussed | Example |
|---|---|
| A. Somebody shares how they enforce attendance in their class, “I do X.” This is not followed up on; conversation moves on to a new topic. | |
| B. | |
| C. Somebody shares how they enforce attendance in their class, “I do X.” Other people ask clarifying questions about the policy, e.g., “Can you say more about X?” | |
| D. | |
| E. Multiple people share how they enforce attendance in their class. This is done in a round-robin format: “I do X,” “I do Y.” People do not directly engage in what others have shared. | |
| F. One person shares “I used to do X to enforce attendance. This semester I am using Y.” They do not directly compare these practices. | |
| G. Multiple people share how they enforce attendance in their classes and these ideas are directly compared, contrasted, and/or engaged with. Person A shares, “I do X.” Person B responds, “I’ve tried X before and it didn’t work for my class because of ___. Instead, I find that practice Y is a more effective strategy.” | |
| H. One person shares, “I used to do X to enforce attendance and I thought it was perfect for my small class size. However, this semester I also have a small class and X has not worked. Instead, I now think Y is a better strategy to handle attendance in small classes because ___.” |
The six communicative approaches. The examples noted in parentheses refer to the examples listed in Table 2
| Interactive | Non-interactive | |
|---|---|---|
| Interactive/mono | Non-interactive/mono | |
| Interactive/dialogic-low-interanimation | Non-interactive/dialogic-low-interanimation | |
| Interactive/dialogic-high-interanimation | Non-interactive/dialogic-high-interanimation | |
Examples of formal and lived pedagogical concepts
| Type of concept | Example |
|---|---|
| Formal pedagogical concepts: | Ex 1: “Students are more comfortable asking a TA or LA for help because they are less intimidating than the professor.” |
| Ex 2: “Students need to have agency over their learning.” | |
| Lived concepts: | Ex 1: “Students had a really hard time with activity 5 yesterday.” |
| Ex 2: “I am not going to give unit tests this term. I will only give module exams.” |
Transcript of a 4-min NextGenPET FOLC conversation about students searching the internet for answers. All names are pseudonyms. Formal concepts (FC) are in bold, and lived concepts (LC) are in italics. Turns of talk represent a continuous flow of conversation
| Turn | Speaker | Transcript |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wallace | The other issue I have, which is... I think this mainly arises because we meet only twice a week for such a short time, so the module gets drawn out over a few weeks, is |
| 2 | Courtney | Yeah, |
| 3 | Wallace | No, yeah, that’s true. |
| 4 | Courtney | |
| 5 | Wallace | I think that is true. They google the answer, but they’re not really quite understanding what’s going on still. I’m not too worried about that. It was just funny when they suddenly start pulling out these words. |
| 6 | Carter | |
| 7 | Courtney | Oh, they don’t. |
| 8 | Carter | |
| 9 | Courtney | |
| 10 | Carter | |
| 11 | Carter | |
| 12 | Courtney | Right. |
| 13 | Yin | What is domain? I’m sorry I don’t think I fully understand. What kind of question that they google? |
| 14 | Wallace | Oh, |
| 15 | Wallace | |
| 16 | Carter | Yin, have you taught the magnetism unit? |
| 17 | Yin | No, but I am very much looking forward to it. |
| 18 | Carter | Yeah, it’s so awesome. I would encourage you... you gotta find a way |
| 19 | Wallace | Despite these problems, and |
The eight meeting segment categories and their definitions. The ordering in the table reflects the priorities of the NextGenPET research team; categories are ordered from least (top row) to most (bottom row) valued
| Meeting segment category | Definition |
|---|---|
| Social Chit-Chat | People talk about their family, themselves, life outside of work; this can include talk about work in the broad scope (e.g., sharing where they are employed) as long as the talk is not tied to FOLC activities or teaching work in detail |
| Meta | Discussing the operation of the FOLC (e.g., How to use the Slack Workspace; What the agenda of the meeting is) |
| Logistics | Discussing “how to do something” in one’s teaching work, but the issue is not pedagogically motivated (e.g., how to upload homework to a learning management system; equipment issues) |
| Status Update | Updating people on how one’s class is going (e.g., where you are in the curriculum, what units you plan to cover, how many students are in the class, how a lesson went); a report on your teaching “condition” with |
| Generating detailed descriptions and explanations for pedagogical problem | When people are reporting in depth on a clearly articulated pedagogical issue, i.e., there is a description of what has happened and some statement or conjecture about |
| Generating solutions to a problem | Describing in detail what one did in class to address a particular pedagogical issue. The issue itself may be implicit. These are conversations where people are reporting how they run some activity or deal with some issue in the classroom, “how to’s” that are pedagogically motivated (e.g., how they use student assistants; how they use a particular teaching strategy; how they run an activity). |
| Generating solutions to a problem | Same as above, except an |
| Developing a Pedagogical Concept | The group collectively addresses a pedagogical issue by making links between lived and formal concepts, developing a more general pedagogical concept that applies to the situation at hand and a number of other future teaching situations. (The developed concept, while often previously known to individual member(s) of the group and the broader education community, is new to the group’s |
The theoretically possible combinations of TxOTL codes
| Concept development | Communicative approach | Meeting segment category |
|---|---|---|
| No | N/A | Social Chit-Chat |
| Mono, low interanimation, or | Meta | |
| high interanimation | Logistics | |
| interactive or non-interactive | Status Update | |
| Generating Detailed Description and Explanations for Pedagogical Problem | ||
| Generating Solutions to problem without why | ||
| Generating Solutions to problem with why | ||
| Yes | High interanimation | Developing a Pedagogical Concept |
| interactive or non-interactive |
Concept development requires that a high interanimation communicative approach is used; however, high interanimation can occur when there is no concept development. For example, participants can compare and contrast lived concepts (such as their experience with a teaching issue), without discussing a formal concept. We do not code Social Chit-Chat segments for communicative approach (as explained in “Analytic approach” section)
Fig. 3Flow chart representing the analytic process of applying the TxOTL to a meeting segment. Gray boxes include the taxonomy categories
Fig. 4A A timeline representation of a FOLC meeting coded with the TxOTL. The vertical black lines divide the meeting into segments. The bottom line tracks the time in the meeting. Reading the timeline from left to right shows how the codes were assigned to each segment during the meeting. Reading the timeline vertically shows how a particular segment was coded along all the taxonomy dimensions. B Timeline representation of another NextGenPET FOLC meeting coded with the taxonomy. C Timeline of a second meeting from the same NextGenPET FOLC group represented in timeline B