Full Description
Changing the Conventional University Classroom highlights the interesting interventions practiced around the world by higher education instructors who were forced to make necessary changes in the conversion from face-to-face educational instruction to the use of online and virtual platforms owing to the COVID pandemic.
Chronicling how academic staff and instructors were pushed to utilize modern technology and virtual exchange platforms to create meaningful classroom discussions and facilitate lively interactions between learners and faculty members, the chapters showcase the importance of quality assurance and reveal how educators prioritized regular monitoring of students' interaction, performance, and involvement in class.
Collated in this collection of contemporary research, each chapter provides insight into the rapid evolution of educational approaches during the pandemic. Scholars demonstrate how these changes to the conventional way of teaching have shaped the field of education, and how technology is expected to bring further radical improvements in the near future.
Contents
Part I. Active Learning Practices
Introduction to Changing the Conventional Classroom; Enakshi Sengupta and Patrick Blessinger
Chapter 1. Connecting the Pieces: An Active Learning Constructivist Approach to Graduate Online Instruction through an Online Jigsaw Activity; Angela D. Carter
Chapter 2. A Shift to Virtual Exchange + Simulation in Higher Education; Maria Laura Angelini and Rut Muñiz
Chapter 3. Classroom Mapping: New Perspectives on Capturing Student Engagement in the Classroom; Laura Cruz and Justine Lindemann
Chapter 4. Future - Present Learning and Teaching: A Case Study in Smart Learning; Pen Lister
Part II. Multi-Disciplinary Approaches
Chapter 5. The Classroom as A Stage: Commedia Dell'arte as Multilingual Pedagogy for International Business School Students at The University of South Australia; Corinna Di Niro and Jeanne-Marie Viljoen
Chapter 6. When the Boys Come Home: An Authentic and Interdisciplinary Audio Drama Production; Daithí McMahon, Chris Ribchester, Mark Randell, Michael Brown, and Phil Baggaley
Chapter 7. The Pedagogy of the Pedagogical Turn; Richard Hudson-Miles