P. Gondoni, Matteo Bozzi, Barbara Balossi, Gianmaria Calisesi, E. Ferocino, Immacolata Genco, L. M. Molteni, Andrea Pini, Filippo Rezoagli, M. Zanoletti, Maurizio Zani
{"title":"A NOVEL APPROACH TO ONLINE PHYSICS REFRESHER COURSES AT POLITECNICO DI MILANO","authors":"P. Gondoni, Matteo Bozzi, Barbara Balossi, Gianmaria Calisesi, E. Ferocino, Immacolata Genco, L. M. Molteni, Andrea Pini, Filippo Rezoagli, M. Zanoletti, Maurizio Zani","doi":"10.21125/INTED.2021.0336","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Among the challenges that universities are facing nowadays, one that deserves special attention is the increasing number of dropouts. Refresher courses for perspective freshmen have regularly been organised at Politecnico di Milano over the last years as a means to tackle this issue. Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the present situation posed serious limitations to traditional teaching methods this year, especially for long (3-4 hours) lectures which may be difficult to follow online. In this paper we present a novel approach based on a blend of non-interactive conventional lectures in large groups and interactive lessons in smaller groups. The course was delivered online using the Microsoft Teams software according to the following structure: first, a live video of a 1-hour lecture was streamed by a single tutor for the whole pool of approximately 1000 students. During this streaming, the students were not allowed to interact with the tutor or with one another by any means. Afterwards, 8 teams of students were formed and assigned to different tutors for the following three hours of more interactive lectures. Each tutor presented examples and exercises of their own choice (mainly on the same topic as the streamed video) and delivered guided solutions while promoting the interaction among students. Furthermore, a common set of short problems was given to each team: this activity could be performed at any time during the second part of the block, as decided by each tutor. In order to span among different teaching styles, the student teams were assigned to a different tutor every day for the interactive part of the lesson. As an additional resource, an online forum was activated on a dedicated website, which allowed students to ask questions on the course topics in an asynchronous way. At the end of the course, every student was invited to fill in an anonymous survey to express their satisfaction with the course. The results of the survey indicate an overall degree of satisfaction with a mean rating over 75%. show that a larger group of the interviewed sample followed the first part of the lecture live rather than on YouTube, in either case expressing a satisfaction degree between 78% and 80%. The interactive lessons with tutors were appreciated by approximately 79% of the students, and the percentage of satisfactions decreases to 76% when it comes to quizzes. However, the data concerning asynchronous viewing, interactive lessons and quizzes are more broadly scattered. The overall satisfaction with the course approximately with smaller standard than the previous questions.","PeriodicalId":318547,"journal":{"name":"INTED2021 Proceedings","volume":"19 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"INTED2021 Proceedings","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.21125/INTED.2021.0336","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Among the challenges that universities are facing nowadays, one that deserves special attention is the increasing number of dropouts. Refresher courses for perspective freshmen have regularly been organised at Politecnico di Milano over the last years as a means to tackle this issue. Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the present situation posed serious limitations to traditional teaching methods this year, especially for long (3-4 hours) lectures which may be difficult to follow online. In this paper we present a novel approach based on a blend of non-interactive conventional lectures in large groups and interactive lessons in smaller groups. The course was delivered online using the Microsoft Teams software according to the following structure: first, a live video of a 1-hour lecture was streamed by a single tutor for the whole pool of approximately 1000 students. During this streaming, the students were not allowed to interact with the tutor or with one another by any means. Afterwards, 8 teams of students were formed and assigned to different tutors for the following three hours of more interactive lectures. Each tutor presented examples and exercises of their own choice (mainly on the same topic as the streamed video) and delivered guided solutions while promoting the interaction among students. Furthermore, a common set of short problems was given to each team: this activity could be performed at any time during the second part of the block, as decided by each tutor. In order to span among different teaching styles, the student teams were assigned to a different tutor every day for the interactive part of the lesson. As an additional resource, an online forum was activated on a dedicated website, which allowed students to ask questions on the course topics in an asynchronous way. At the end of the course, every student was invited to fill in an anonymous survey to express their satisfaction with the course. The results of the survey indicate an overall degree of satisfaction with a mean rating over 75%. show that a larger group of the interviewed sample followed the first part of the lecture live rather than on YouTube, in either case expressing a satisfaction degree between 78% and 80%. The interactive lessons with tutors were appreciated by approximately 79% of the students, and the percentage of satisfactions decreases to 76% when it comes to quizzes. However, the data concerning asynchronous viewing, interactive lessons and quizzes are more broadly scattered. The overall satisfaction with the course approximately with smaller standard than the previous questions.
在当今大学面临的挑战中,值得特别关注的一个问题是辍学率的上升。过去几年,米兰理工大学(Politecnico di Milano)定期为有远见的新生组织进修课程,以解决这一问题。受新冠肺炎疫情影响,今年的传统教学方法受到严重限制,特别是长时间(3-4小时)的课程可能难以在线跟上。在本文中,我们提出了一种新的方法,该方法基于大群体的非交互式传统讲座和小群体的交互式课程的混合。该课程使用Microsoft Teams软件,按照以下结构进行在线授课:首先,由一名导师为大约1000名学生直播一小时的讲座视频。在此期间,学生不允许与导师互动,也不允许以任何方式与他人互动。之后,学生组成了8个小组,并被分配给不同的导师,在接下来的三个小时里进行更多的互动讲座。每位导师都展示了自己选择的例子和练习(主要是与流媒体视频相同的主题),并提供了指导性的解决方案,同时促进了学生之间的互动。此外,每个小组都有一组共同的短问题:这个活动可以在小组第二部分的任何时间进行,由每个导师决定。为了跨越不同的教学风格,学生团队每天被分配给不同的导师进行课程的互动部分。作为一个额外的资源,在一个专门的网站上启动了一个在线论坛,允许学生以异步方式就课程主题提出问题。在课程结束时,每个学生都被邀请填写一份匿名调查,以表达他们对课程的满意度。调查结果显示,整体满意度平均评分超过75%。显示,更大的受访样本群体跟随讲座的第一部分直播,而不是在YouTube上,在任何一种情况下表示满意度在78%和80%之间。大约79%的学生对与导师的互动课程表示赞赏,而在小测验方面,满意度下降到76%。然而,关于异步观看、互动课程和测验的数据则更为分散。对课程的整体满意度约以低于前几题的标准。