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PAUL J. GREEN - Peer Instruction

Peer Instruction in Physics & Astronomy

By encouraging student participation and interaction during the lecture, Peer Instruction encourages students to critically think through the arguments being developed, and to discuss their ideas and insights with their neighbors.

Briefly, lectures are broken into sections. Start with a brief, more-or-less standard format mini-lecture on one of the fundamental concepts to be covered. This mini-lecture is then followed by a ConcepTest -- a short multiple-choice question that tests the students' understanding. After one minute, the students record an answer and are then asked to turn to their neighbors to try and convince them of their answers. This invariably leads to animated discussions. After another minute or so, the students are asked to reconsider their answer and record it again. A quick poll is taken so the instructor can decide whether to move on to the next concept, or to continue on the same. This process may repeat half a dozen times until the end of the class.

Instructors have pointed out the benefits of teaching by questioning over the more traditional approach of teaching by telling. This has led to consistent, measurable short- and long-term improvement in student performance. Student satisfaction with the courses have been high. Instructors across the country, teaching in a variety of institutions to widely differing student bodies, have noted similar benefits.

The improvements in student performance have been widely publicized in Sheila Tobias' book Revitalizing Undergraduate Science (Research Corporation, 1992). Peer Instruction was originally developed and implemented for introductory Physics by Eric Mazur at Harvard. For more details, check out Mazur's PEER INSTRUCTION: A User's Manual, or see http://galileo.harvard.edu/home.html

How can we implement Peer Instruction in Astronomy?

Contibutors and Facilitators to Date:

Andreas Berlind and the Ohio State Dept of Physics and Astronomy, Caroline Cox, Sharlene Ford, Joe Heafner, Robert Hill, Vinay L. Kashyap, James Lombardi, Philip M. Sadler, Eric Schulman, Camilla Thomas