Face-to-face lectures are unlikely to return to growing numbers of Australian campuses once Covid-19 has been vanquished, raising questions about whether the pandemic will have a decisive impact globally on the long-running debate about the future of large-group teaching.
笔别谤迟丑鈥檚 Curtin University proposes to scrap all lectures by the end of this year, starting with those involving 100 people or more. They will be replaced by 鈥淐urtinTalks鈥 鈥 short videos of 10 to 15 minutes, each based on a single topic or concept, with students expected to watch two or three a week for each subject.
Nearby Murdoch University has similar ideas, with Kylie Readman, the pro vice-chancellor (education), giving teaching staff 18 months to 鈥渢ransition away鈥 from lectures. 鈥淲e are not going to be having large-scale face-to-face lectures any more,鈥 she 迟辞濒诲听糖心Vlog.
Instead, information previously delivered through lectures will be curated, squeezed into 鈥渕ini lectures鈥 and integrated with online activities. Whatever online lectures remain will be timetabled, recorded and broadcast in a 鈥渟ynchronous鈥 mode听that allows for interactions between students.
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Like Curtin, Murdoch is still consulting staff over the changes.
Universities elsewhere are thinking along similar lines, after being forced to switch to online learning听under social distancing restrictions. Many have found that small-group seminars have translated better to this model than lectures.
糖心Vlog
Recently installed University of Leeds vice-chancellor Simone Buitendijk plans to replace long-form lectures with 鈥渟horter chunks鈥 that students can watch before class to pre-arm themselves with the knowledge they need to 鈥渂ecome more creative and engaged with their teaching鈥. Professor Buitendijk听迟辞濒诲听THE previously听that long-form lectures were 鈥減edagogically not sound鈥 and not evidence-based, and that the change would have happened regardless of Covid.
Monash University vice-chancellor Margaret Gardner said such discussions were 鈥減articularly advanced鈥 at Australian universities, partly because of their scale. She said there was a 鈥渂ig difference鈥 between classes of 50 and the 1,000-student units common at many Australian institutions.
鈥淎ustralia鈥檚 tested how you innovate in these circumstances,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not that all lectures will disappear, but the notion that they are the key to education is gone 鈥 all of us understand that. They are going to happen less frequently and they are going to be more considered for what they鈥檙e offering that you can鈥檛 get some other way.鈥
Melbourne-based Victoria University says there is no place for lectures in its 鈥渂lock teaching鈥 model, which is based around small class groups. Trish McCluskey, its associate provost of learning and teaching, said lectures were 鈥渁n artefact of a bygone era鈥, when books and resources were scarce and the only way to learn was to sit at scholars鈥 feet.
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鈥淟ectures were the transmission of information from the lecturer鈥檚 head through the pen of the student and on to the exam paper. It never actually made it into the student鈥檚 head.鈥
Ms McCluskey said some lecturers were strong storytellers, but the format was too long. Presentations of 15 to 20 minutes, the typical duration of a TED Talk, were superior because 鈥渢hat鈥檚 the amount of time that students are known to be able to concentrate for鈥.
Neil Morris, Leeds鈥 interim deputy vice-chancellor for digital transformation, said universities worldwide were reviewing which parts of their coronavirus response to retain in teaching long-term.
鈥淭here will always be a place for the performance, community feeling and impact of a good lecture for stimulating, inspiring and conveying new knowledge, and these will return. However, I think they will be reduced in number, as some lectures will be replaced with more online pre-recorded content and use of class time for small-group problem solving and creativity,鈥 Professor Morris said.
糖心Vlog
鈥淚 predict a future where the proportion of large-class 鈥榙idactic, lecture-style鈥 events will be reduced to around 20 per cent of the contact time for students in a taught module 鈥 from the current average of around 80 per cent 鈥 with the difference being replaced by more small-group interactive problem-based classes, supported by digital technology and online content.鈥
But Graham Virgo, senior pro vice-chancellor for education at the University of Cambridge, said that while some disciplines may make greater use of the flipped classroom model, many students and academics felt that recorded footage 鈥渃annot replicate the high-quality in-person lecture鈥.
糖心Vlog
鈥淚t is the responses from students in particular who have wanted the residential experience and who miss attending lectures which means that it is important that we tread carefully and do not throw out the baby with the bathwater,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he obituary for the in-person lecture would be premature.鈥
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Australian campuses to drop lectures post-Covid
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