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Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

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Page 1: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL

John TaggIndiana UniversityOctober 15, 2010

Page 2: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

“[T]he general unreliability of all information presents a special problem . . . : all action takes place, so to speak, in a kind of twilight, which, like fog or moonlight, often tends to make things seem grotesque and larger than they really are.”

Page 3: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

“[T]he general unreliability of all information presents a special problem in war: all action takes place, so to speak, in a kind of twilight, which, like fog or moonlight, often tends to make things seem grotesque and larger than they really are.”Carl von Clausewitz, On War

Page 4: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Adam Brandenburger and Barry Nalebuff, Co-opetition, 1996

“Games in business are played in a fog—not von Cluasewitz’s fog of war, perhaps, but a fog nonetheless. That’s why perceptions are a fundamental element of any game.”

Page 5: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

The Fog of Learning

• Lack of Information• Unreliable Information• Distorted Information

Page 6: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Lack of Information

• “The most important single factor influencing learning is what the learner already knows. Ascertain this and teach . . . accordingly.”– David Ausubel, 1968

Page 7: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Lack of InformationAbout Students

• What do students know? What do they believe?

• What are students’ assumptions and expectations about the learning environment

• What are students’ prior experiences in similar learning environments (e.g., classes)?

• What are students’ goals?

Page 8: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Lack of InformationAbout Faculty

• What do faculty know? What do they believe?

• What are faculty assumptions and expectations about the learning environment?

• What are faculty other than you doing in the classroom?

• What are faculty goals?

Page 9: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Lack of Information About Who’s Doing What

• Pedagogy: How are teachers teaching?• Approaches to learning: How are students

studying?• Outcomes

Page 10: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Unreliable Information

• Chris Argyris and Donald Schön: Theories of Action

• Espoused Theory• Theory-in-Use

Page 11: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Espoused Theory vs. Theory-in-Use

• “Although people [often] do not behave congruently with their espoused theories, . . . they do behave congruently with their theories-in-use, and they are unaware of this fact.” --Chris Argyris, Reasoning, Learning, and Action: Individual and Organizational, 1982.

Page 12: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Is the University a Reliable Source?

“Institutions espouse high-sounding values, of course, in their mission statements, college catalogues, and public pronouncements by institutional leaders. The problem is that the explicitly stated values—which always include a strong commitment to undergraduate education—are often at variance with the actual values that drive our decisions and policies”--Alexander Astin, What Matters in College, 1993

Page 13: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Examples of Unreliable Information(TFDN)

• Accreditation: Faculty don’t believe it.• Student learning outcomes: hard to get

faculty to believe it’s not just a game.• Syllabus: do students read it? Do they believe

it? • Students dubious about what faculty

members say. “Will this be on the test?”

Page 14: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Distorted Information

• Organizational and work structures magnify some things unnaturally

• And shrink or conceal others.

Page 15: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Structures That Distort

• Credit hour• Grades• Requirements—General Education or Major• Classes

Page 16: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Can SoTL Help?

Page 17: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Maybe

Page 18: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Be Aware

• The fog simplifies; visibility introduces complexity and complications.

• Reality comes in layers; we need to make our way carefully.

Page 19: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

How can SoTL Disperse the Fog?

Page 20: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

1. Seek to Reveal What Is Hidden

• Look first at students and teachers and the learning environment, not organizational structures.

• Ask new questions, based on ones to which we have reasonably reliable answers.

Page 21: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

2. Extend Beyond the Classroom

• “Go meta”— “with an eye not only to improving their own classroom but to advancing practice beyond it.”—Shulman & Hutchings

• Go beyond the discipline—draw on the work of other departments and disciplines for models and lessons.

• Make SoTL the core of Institutional Research.

Page 22: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

What Do We Know?

• Enrollments• Grades• Numbers of students engaged in formal

activities and programs.

Page 23: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

What Don’t We Know?

• Level of Academic Challenge• Active and Collaborative Learning• Student-Faculty Interactions• Enriching Educational Experiences• Supportive Campus Environments• Who is engaged in what high-impact activities

Page 24: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

3. Make the Goal of SoTL Organizational Transformation

• SoTL should be Action Science: • “Action research. . . Involves iterative cycles of

identifying a problem, planning, acting, and evaluating.”—Chris Argyris, Robert Putnam, & Diana McLain Smith, Action Science, 1985

• “The intended change typically involves reeducation, . . . changing patterns of thinking and acting that are presently well established in individuals and groups.”—Argyris, Putnam, & Smith.

Page 25: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Example: Stages of Change

• James Prochaska, Carlo DiClemente, & John Norcross:

• “In Search of How People Change: Applications to Addictive Behaviors,” 1992.

• Changing for Good, 1994.• How do people intentionally change addictive

behaviors? Smoking, Drug Addiction, Obesity.

Page 26: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Stages of Change

1. Precontemplation: No intention to change, some awareness.

2. Contemplation: Thinking about changing, no commitment.

3. Preparation: Intend to take action, but only small changes.

4. Action: Actively modifying behavior or environment.

5. Maintenance: Preserve gains and prevent relapse.

Page 27: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

A Transtheoretical Model of Change (TTM)

• Change is cyclical.• “You can’t change until you want to.” But

what makes you want to?• “The amount of progress clients make

following intervention tends to be a function of their pretreatment stage of change.” Prochaska & Norcross, Systems of Psychotherapy.

Page 28: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

A Transtheoretical Model of Change (TTM)

• “One of the most powerful findings to emerge from our research is that particular processes of change are more effective during particular stages of change. Twenty-five years of research in behavioral medicine and psychotherapy converge in showing that different processes of change are differentially effective in certain stages of change.”—Prochaska & Norcross, Systems of Psychotherapy

Page 29: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Learning Is Change

• Anton Tolman, Director, Faculty Center for Teaching Excellence, Utah Valley [email protected]

• Revised Study Process Questionnaire• TTM Surveys• How to facilitate metacognition

Page 30: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Approaches to LearningFerence Marton and Roger Säljö

• Sought to distinguish qualitatively rather than quantitatively between student approaches to learning.

• “A description of what the students learn is preferable to the description of how much they learn.”

Page 31: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Two approaches to learning:

• Surface approach: focusing on the signs, the words of the essay, the numbers in the physics problem.

• Deep approach: focusing on the meaning, what the signs signify, the ideas the author is presenting, the concepts that the numbers represent

Page 32: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Learning Is Change

• Anton Tolman, Director, Faculty Center for Teaching Excellence, Utah Valley [email protected]

• Revised Study Process Questionnaire• TTM Surveys• How to facilitate metacognition

Page 33: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

TTM Stage and RSPQ Score

Surf

ace

Appr

oach

M

ean

Page 34: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Classroom Research OR Institutional Research: A Foggy Choice

Page 35: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

No Class Is an Island

• Every teacher is engaged in institutional research.

• If we all knew it, we’d all be smarter than we are.

Page 36: Dispelling the Fog of Learning through SoTL John Tagg Indiana University October 15, 2010

Fog-clearing Questions

• How do faculty approaches to teaching affect student approaches to learning? What is a deep approach to teaching?

• How do student experiences affect student stages of change-readiness?

• How does the sequence and co-incidence of student experiences affect long-term metacognitive change?

• How could the local and global design of learning experiences maximize student development.