The document defines the flipped classroom model as one where traditional lecture content is delivered at home via video and class time is used for applied learning activities. It explores how this changes the instructional landscape by making the home the lecture space and class the collaboration/problem solving space. Potential benefits discussed include allowing students to work at their own pace and enabling teachers to spend more one-on-one time with students, though concerns about the digital divide and lack of interaction are also raised. The document provides resources for implementing flipped learning and encourages teachers to reflect on how it could enhance their lessons.
2. What Is a Flipped Classroom?
BBS Professional Development Day
7 October 2012
Kathleen McKim, HS Media Specialist
3. In this session, we will
• Define "the flipped classroom."
• Explore how this concept changes the
instructional landscape.
• Reflect on ways that "flipping" can enable
student success.
4. Some Definitions
• The flipped classroom changes the place in
which content is delivered (Valenza, 2012).
• Basically the concept of a flipped class is this:
that which is traditionally done in class is now
done at home, and that which is traditionally
done as homework is now completed in class.
But as you will see, there is more to a flipped
classroom than this (Bergmann & Sams,
2012).
6. The Changing Educational Landscape
• The home becomes the lecture space. The
hundred+ year-old frontal teaching model flips.
• The class becomes conversation space, creation
space, space where teachers actively facilitate
learning.
• Class time is freed up for interactive and applied
learning, activities that inspire critical thinking,
exploration, inquiry, discussion, collaboration,
problem solving.
-Valenza, 2012
9. The New Bloom’s
The Blooming Butterfly poster by Learning Today is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-
Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
12. Does flipping enable student success?
Pros Cons
• Easier for students who may • Same lecture-centered
have missed class to keep approach, only online.
up because they can watch • Repacking of traditional,
the video at any time. didactic learning.
• Teachers spend class time • Lack of teacher interaction.
working through any gaps • Digital Divide
or misunderstandings
around the content. • Not everyone learns best
through a screen.
• Students move at their own
pace.
• More time for one-to-one. THINK/PAIR/SHARE
14. Reflect
• Think of your favorite
lesson? Could it be
enhanced by flipping?
What would your
students gain? What
would be lost?
15. Take Away
• Reflecting on pedagogy.
• Rethinking how
teachers reach
students.
• Inspiring teachers to
change the way they’ve
always done things.
• Motivating teachers to
use technology.
(Herz, 2012)
16. Resources
• Flipped Learning Network For great videos you can use:
(www.flippedlearning.org) • TED-ed , www.ed.ted.com
• Flipped Classroom Manifest, • OER Commons,
http://www.thedailyriff.com/a www.oercommons.org
rticles/the-flipped-class- • Curriki,
manifest-823.php www.welcome.curriki.org
• Jackie Gerstein, • Khan Academy,
http://usergeneratededucatio www.kahnacademy.org
n.wordpress.com/2011/06/13/
the-flipped-classroom-model- • SolveforX ,
a-full-picture/ www.wesolveforx.com
• TechSmith, The Flipped • MIT Open Courseware,
Classroom, www.ocw.mit.edu/high-school
http://www.techsmith.com/fli
pped-classroom.html
17. References
• Bergmann, J. & Sams, A. (2012). Chapter 2: the flipped classroom. Flip Your Classroom: Reach
Every Student in Every Class Every Day. Virginia: ASCD/ISTE.
• DMS Flipped Math. The Flipped Classroom by Aaron Sams. Accessed October 4, 2012, from
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AHYm7U0ePWY.
• Gerstein, J. (2011). Flipped classroom full picture: an example lesson. User Generated
Education. Accessed October 4, 2012, from
http://usergeneratededucation.wordpress.com/2011/11/20/flipped-classroom-full-picture-
an-example-lesson/.
• Gerstein, J. (2012). An illustration of the flipped classroom: the full picture. Accessed October
4, 2012, from
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cXcCBuU3ytU&list=UUxhUm1DtscZtu6mHOpORivQ&ind
ex=2&feature=plcp.
• Herz, M.B. (July 10, 2012). The flipped classroom: pro and con. Edutopia. Accessed October
4, 2012, from http://www.edutopia.org/blog/flipped-classroom-pro-and-con-mary-beth-
hertz.
• International Society for Technology in Education (2007). ISTE nets-s. Accessed October 4,
2012, from www.iste.org/nets.
• Partnership for 21st Century Skills. (2009). 21st century student outcomes and support
systems. Accessed October 4, 1012, from http://www.p21.org/overview/skills-framework.
• Valenza, J. (August 14, 2012). The flipping librarian. Neverending Search. School Library
Journal. Accessed October 4, 2012, from
http://blog.schoollibraryjournal.com/neverendingsearch/2012/08/14/the-flipping-librarian/