Continuous Whiteboards
Use this Feature to Support Active and Engaged Learning
- Make students’ group work visible: When students work out problem sets on the whiteboards in pairs or small groups, it gives the instructor a chance to observe their ideas, where they might be getting stuck, or where they may have a particularly interesting contribution. Asking groups to share out their ideas from their public workspaces often leads to a greater variety of responses and can invite interesting debates and feedback from peers. (Hint: If you’ll use whiteboards regularly, you can ask students to purchase and bring their own markers.)
- Make learning and problem solving visual: Asking students to draw a concept map or a mental model of a concept or process on the whiteboard can be a helpful learning tool for visually or spatially-inclined students. It may be interesting to see how different pairs or groups of students imagine a similar idea.
- Elicit peer feedback in a round-robin fashion: Students may begin by drafting a problem statement or a proposal, drawing the first version of a diagram or model, or writing discussion questions or key ideas on the board. Then, you might have the students rotate in one direction to add comments, questions, feedback on their peers’ work until they return to their space to see what feedback has been left for them. This helps engage all students in pushing each other’s thinking while learning about their peers’ approaches to a similar problem or topic as part of the learning process.
- For more teaching tips and examples, visit the Stearns Center’s Active Learning page.
Technology Instructions
- Well, it’s a whiteboard.
- More seriously, about markers: we recommend (a) requiring students to purchase and bring their own markers, (b) inspecting all student markers before they get used, to ensure they’re whiteboard markers that erase rather than some other kind, and (c) carrying your own backup markers.
- Erasers are important as well: students need to be able to change what they’ve written. Some faculty have suggested that students put the markers they’re required to purchase into a stray sock so that their marker carrying case doubles as an eraser. Cheap dishtowels cut into small squares (4″ – 6″) are also easy to carry and toss in the washer if you want to bring your own supply.
Engaged Learning
We encourage you to take advantage of classroom features to enhance teaching and engaged learning. Please scroll down for instructions on how to use these features.
If you want to... | Consider active learning activities such as... | Use low technology options like... |
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Check understanding | Having students use a piece of their own paper. Supplying an index card for responses. |
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Encourage group discussion | Having students work with other students in the same row or on either side of them. | |
Model problem solving | Having students work on a shared document that is then projected. | |
Engage in interactive lecture | Having students work on a shared document that is then projected. Supplying an index card for responses. |
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Co-create learning experience in the classroom | Having students work with other students in the same row or on either side of them. Having students undertake peer review in Blackboard or Padlet. |
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Encourage peer instruction | Having students create digital presentations outside of class that are then projected. | |
Show real world application | Having students use class time to work on a solution to the problem and give progress reports. |