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Oh great,
more
PBL…
Are we psychoti
c?!
(Attempting) Implementing PBL in the Psychology Undergraduate Curriculum
Gillian Hendry & Dr Sally WigginsPBL Summer Workshop, University of Leicester, 7-9 July 2014
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
About us
Dr Sally Wiggins is a senior lecturer, specialising in Social and Discursive Psychology, and has been using PBL in teaching for around 7 years. To date, she has received two grants to develop PBL within the Psychology curriculum at Strathclyde.
I am a 2nd-year PhD student, funded by the HEA Doctoral Programme, looking at student interaction in PBL (stay tuned; more on this later!). I was the research assistant employed for the latter project, and also have recent experience (2010) of being a student in a PBL-taught class.
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
The project
£25,938 awarded for 18-month project (beginning May 2011), implementing PBL into the Psychology undergraduate curriculum
We couldn’t shift to PBL entirely, but aimed to help encourage student autonomy and engagement in learning
PBL in psychology relatively rare (Abertay, Leeds, Linköping); three years later, becoming more prevalent
Project based upon previous successful implementation of PBL in 4th year ‘Qualitative Methodologies in Psychology’ class (completely PBL-run for full semester)
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
The materials
The project aimed to design and implement PBL into at least one class in each year of the Psychology programme
Things don’t always go to plan! Scope of project was scaled down to accommodate restructuring of degree – instead, PBL components were introduced within a class
The final materials developed were as follows:1st year: ‘Wall of Fame’ problem (basic psychology
class)3rd year*: ‘MI5’ problem (Individual Differences class)3rd year: ‘Panoramic Productions’ problem (Social
Psychology class)4th year: ‘App-y Days’ and ‘Anarchy in the UEC’
problems (CHIP)
*I’ve not made a typo – no second year classes were converted to PBL!
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
Wall of Fame (1st year Psychology)
“You are a team of historians opening a new ‘History of Psychology’ museum, and have been allocated the period 1960-1970. What should be included?”
- Sessions took place over 3 x 1-hour sessions- Were expected to produce one slide of PowerPoint- In final session, class leader presented each of the
slides one by one, class voted
- 1st year students, new to PBL and to psychology, so problem seemed apt in that it gave an overview of psychological research
- 300+ in class, groups of 10 in tiered lecture theatre- GTAs as facilitators
1960 – 1970:Age of political and social instability and change. Turning point in politics,
international relations, culture, science. Sense of going towards new, modern, shocking world. Growing interest in behaviour. Psychology studies become
“fashionable”.
The Milgram study, 1961;designed to measure people’s willingness to obey a higher authority, even if that comes into conflict with their conscience (superego)
Bandura’s “Bobo doll” experiment, 1961 and 1963; found that children exposed to violent scenarios are more likely to act in a physically aggressive way
Harlow and the rhesus monkeys, between 1957 and 1963; baby monkeys removed from mothers and “brought up” by surrogate mother replacements made of wire or wire and cloth. Partial and total isolation. Concludes importance of primary care giver in infants.
Atkinson’s multi-store model of memory, 1968 explains how memory works
Cognitive Psychology; Exploration of mental processes like thought, perception, memory, learning.
Cognitive Therapy seeks to help the patient by identifying and changing dysfunctional mental processes. Founded by Aaron T. Beck.
Star = unethical today; part of the search for shocking, modern change during 1960s
Anti-war movement/ Preoccupation with
war
Link to Nazism (holocaust), and Vietnam and Koran Wars; was there a shared perception of moral conduct amongst participants?
Study of roots of aggression and violence.
Exploration of new ideologies; communism, feminism, Hippies, Sexual Revolution…
Effects of maternal separation and institutionalisation.
Could link to memory loss and damage from war veterans
Led to
Interest in mental processes
Research done at this period led to today’s knowledge about child psychology and education and could be seen as the cause of modern moral codes such as the Nuremberg Principles, the law of war, and the lower percentage of violent TV
shown during the day.
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
MI5(3rd year Individual Differences)
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
MI5 (3rd year Individual Differences)
Instead of 5 x 1-hour lectures, student groups were given the same amount of time to produce a psychometric test
No previous knowledge of psychometric testing, so had to find out firstly, how to construct a test (Likert scales, reliability, validity, scoring), and secondly, what would be an appropriate trait to test for the personality type of someone wanting to work at MI5
- Groups of 5/ 6/ 7, 3rd year students- Tiered lecture theatre, but break-out rooms also- Class size roughly 100 students
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
App-yDays(4th year CHIP)
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
App-y Days (4th year CHIP)
Student groups to develop an app to help someone with schizophrenia, Asperger's syndrome or Alzheimer’s disease in an aspect of their every day life
Groups don’t need to know technical aspect, but should focus on psychological research into chosen condition, and design an app drawing on such research
- 4th (final) year students, groups of 4/ 5- 3 x 1-hour sessions- GTA facilitators
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
Initial Evaluation
Data was collected via questionnaires, focus groups, feedback via assignments
Basic feedback (quantifying responses) measured favourite aspects of PBL, what could be changed, study practices etc.
Basic statistical analysis of the Learning Process Questionnaire (Kember et al., 2004) revealed no significant difference in approaches to learning (deep/ surface), before and after partaking in PBL
Focus groups/ assignment feedback revealed students had both positive and negative views of PBL
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
Negatives
- Project was scaled down (from whole, 12 week classes) to much shorter PBL components
- Not all years got involved (no PBL in second year, due to staff resistance)
- PRACTICALITIES (room bookings, lack of access to computers, class sizes)
- Gripes about assessment
Why should she get the same grade as me
when she never put the work in?!
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
Negatives
“because it was not graded we did not feel
as though it was important as the other
work we had to complete at the same
time”
“it was hard to combine all of the information while pleasing all team
members”“some members of
the team didn’t perhaps contribute
as much”
“It was also difficult to hear other members of
the team due to the room we were in while
working as a team”
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
Positives
- (Many) Students found materials fun and interesting
- Appreciated the change from standard lecture format
- Enjoyed ‘real world-ness’ of problems
- Recognised benefits of self-centred teaching, as opposed to being taught
- Enjoyed the face-to-face contact with peersLOL this is so much fun!
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
Positives
“Problem based learning is, in my opinion, a very appropriate method of improving in group co-
operation and introduces an extremely fun oriented
environment”
“Although initially it seems as though all of our prior work was a
waste of time, we came to realise it was
in actual fact beneficial”
“I feel as a whole we worked well together and the sessions have definitely benefited my
overall learning”
“I found that it was good to have different perspectives and I felt
like we kept each other motivated”
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
Future plans…
Currently, unfortunately, we are back to square one. Although some of the PBL components carried into the following year, in academic year 2013/ 2014, all of them were dropped, due to factors mentioned previously
However, my PhD is looking at student interaction in PBL, so if we can understand more about the intricacies of what actually happens within the group setting, we will be better placed to support effective PBL implementation
Support teaching staff ‘afraid of the unknown’, time to develop materials, reassurance from other Psychology departments that it IS possible
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
So, are we psychotic for attempting this?!
@StrathUni_Gill @[email protected]
AcknowledgementsUniversity of Strathclyde Education Excellence Fund for supporting the project
Staff and students (both willing and unwilling!)
Sally for paying me for seven months to have fun creating the materials!
Thank you for listening!