Assessing the Effects of Using Interactive Learning Activities in a Large Science Class

Authors

  • Valerie Dean O’Loughlin Indiana University School of Medicine Author

Abstract

A budding scholar of teaching wants not only to improve student learning, but also to assess methodically whether instructional techniques have an impact on this learning and to report the results. Drawing on the work of Angelo and Cross (1993), the author incorporated interactive learning activities to complement traditional lecture in a large undergraduate anatomy class. Multidimensional assessments (process, affective, and performance measures) were used to measure the effects of the teaching intervention. Results show that interactive learning activities created more active student engagement, resulted in improvement in students' exam and overall course scores, and improved the instructor's teaching performance.

Published

2024-03-22