Participants in this workshop were asked to explore three related questions: (1) how to create measures of undergraduate learning in STEM courses; (2) how such measures might be organized into a framework of criteria and benchmarks to assess instruction; and (3) how such a framework might be used at the institutional level to assess STEM courses and curricula to promote ongoing improvements. The following issues were highlighted: * Effective science instruction identifies explicit, measurable learning objectives. * Effective teaching assists students in reconciling their incomplete or erroneous preconceptions with new knowledge. * Instruction that is limited to passive delivery of information requiring memorization of lecture and text contents is likely to be unsuccessful in eliciting desired learning outcomes. * Models of effective instruction that promote conceptual understanding in students and the ability of the learner to apply knowledge in new situations are available. * Institutions need better assessment tools for evaluating course design and effective instruction.
* Deans and department chairs often fail to recognize measures they have at their disposal to enhance incentives for improving education. * Much is still to be learned from research into how to improve instruction in ways that enhance student learning.
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Mathematical Sciences Education Board, National Research Council
More about National Research CouncilCommittee for a Review of the Evaluation Data on the Effectiveness of NSF-Supported and Commercially Generated Mathematics Curriculum Materials, Jere Confrey and Vicki Stohl, Editors, National Research Council
More about Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and EducationCommittee on Attracting Science and Mathematics PhDs to K-12 Education: From Analysis to Implementation, Division of Policy and Global Affairs, National Research Council
More about Center for EducationRichard A. McCray, Robert L. DeHaan, and Julie Anne Schuck, Editors, Steering Committee on Criteria and Benchmarks for Increased Learning from Undergraduate STEM Instruction, Committee on Undergraduate Science Education, National Research Council
More about Steering Committee on Criteria and Benchmarks for Increased Learning from Undergraduate STEM Instruction