Integrating Active Learning into Paleontology Classes / Alison N. Olcott.
Material type: TextSeries: Elements of paleontology | Cambridge elementsPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2018Description: 1 online resource (25 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781108681698 (ebook)
- 560.71 23
- QE715 .O53 2018
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 30 Oct 2018).
The educational benefits of replacing in-class lectures with hands-on activities are clear. Such active learning is a natural fit for paleontology, which can provide opportunities for examining fossils, analyzing data and writing. Additionally, there are a number of topics in the field that are exciting to geology majors and non-majors alike: very few can resist the lure of dinosaurs, huge meteor impacts, vicious Cretaceous sharks or a giant Pleistocene land mammal. However, it can seem difficult to introduce these techniques into a large general education class full of non-majors: paleontological specimens provide a natural starting point for hands-on classroom activities, but in a large class it is not always practical or possible to provide enough fossil material for all students. Here I will briefly introduce different types of active learning approaches, and then explain how I have applied these to a large introductory paleontology class for non-majors.
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