It is common when implementing active learning to have concerns about whether students will meaningfully engage in planned activities and discussions. Within the physics education community, we are fortunate to have access to a collection of best practices on promoting student engagement and fostering a productive classroom climate. Written for the physics teacher audience specifically, this collection includes a variety of useful tips and resources that are directly applicable to a variety of physics classrooms and are freely available at www.physport.org. In this column, I hope to contribute to this broad conversation about promoting students’ productive engagement in a different manner by sharing a few pitfalls that I fell into during my first few years of physics teaching—pitfalls that created barriers to students experiencing joy as a central and defining feature of their active learning experiences. Some of the challenges I faced in creating a more joyful active learning classroom were related to tacit beliefs I held about active learning that were at times counterproductive, including notions that
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January 2020
TALKIN’ PHYSICS|
January 01 2020
Engagement and joy in the active learning classroom
Brian W. Frank
Brian W. Frank
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Middle Tennessee State University
, Murfreesboro, TN 37132
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Phys. Teach. 58, 76 (2020)
Citation
Brian W. Frank; Engagement and joy in the active learning classroom. Phys. Teach. 1 January 2020; 58 (1): 76. https://doi.org/10.1119/1.5141986
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