Flipped Learning

Overview and Introduction: The WHAT and WHO

‘Flipped Learning’ is a pedagogical approach that changes the way students engage with their learning by reversing the order of the traditional lecture and assignment components of a course/unit/lesson. Traditional classroom models require students to participate in live lectures with an instructor, and then practice what they have learned through homework assignments. In the Flipped approach, instructors provide learning materials to access ‘outside’ of class time and then use the class time for hands-on activities (e.g., practice exercises, problem-solving, workshop-style discussions, project collaboration) that enable students to apply the concepts in an interactive learning environment.

Students Benefits:

Instructor Benefits:

Implementation and Timing: The WHEN, WHERE, and HOW

Flipped Learning can occur for one lesson, one unit, or a whole course. It depends on the course objectives and the needs of the class. You can start with one lesson or a session that students tend to struggle with or that you as the instructor never have enough time to cover sufficiently. The key is to inform the students how the lesson/unit/course will work and set the expectations for study load outside the classroom.

Planning your Flipped Course or a Single Lecture 

Adapting an entire course to a flipped model will require a steep initial investment of time. However, taking the time to create a repository of lecture content for your course will become an asset for future course iterations and the LTH has the resources to help you. Below is a process as well as sample questions to ask yourself as you consider this model.

Good Practices

The following are some Flipped Learning practices that have been tested by researchers and practitioners while implementing the Flipped Learning Model:

Classroom Activity Examples

You could start the class with a short review of what students should have covered before coming to the class and explain the day’s activities. Assess student readiness through a muddiest points review, a short quiz, or an open dialog for student questions. Be ready to adapt classroom activities based on student readiness. Class time could include a range of activities such as solving complex chapter problems as a group, using Think-Pair-Share exercises, solving open-ended case studies, or working on hands-on group projects among many others. A few examples from the literature are included below.

Teaching StrategyExample Application
Clicker quizComparing the Effectiveness of Blended, Semi-Flipped, and Flipped Formats in an Engineering Numerical Methods Course 
Game-Based LearningRe-Designing the Senior Design Classroom Experience with Game-Based Learning
Active learning: pair problem solvingFlippin’ Fluid Mechanics – Comparison Using Two Groups
Practicing Individual Steps of the Engineering Design Process Implementing and Assessing a Flipped Classroom Model for First-Year Engineering Design
Group and individual problem-solving activitiesThe Problem-Solving Studio: An Apprenticeship Environment for Aspiring Engineers

Rationale and Research: The WHY

Information on any topic abounds and students can easily get the information. Students struggle to apply that information to practice. A flipped approach enables faculty to become more of a coach and provide guidance where it is most needed for student success.

Additional Resources and References