This article explores how a traditional, didactic chemistry instructor integrated principles of active learning into undergraduate courses. While many of the principles of small group structure have found their way into K–12 classrooms, many science educators in institutions of higher learning still use a traditional lecture focus for their teaching. The principle is simple: students learn best working together in small, interactive groups, but putting this into practice in the college-level science curricula can be complex. Besides exploring the process, this article also focuses on a small pilot research project that concentrates on student achievement results and responses, especially the variance in grades earned when cooperative structures are applied to course instruction.
Noel S. Sturm (Sat,) studied this question.
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