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Research

Distinct factors predict use of active learning techniques by pre-tenure and tenured STEM faculty

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Pages 357-372 | Received 17 Jul 2019, Accepted 05 May 2021, Published online: 03 Jun 2021
 

Abstract

Despite decades of research indicating that active learning techniques (ALTs) are more effective than traditional lecture, ALTs are not widely implemented in STEM undergraduate classrooms. While ALT implementation is happening in a number of disciplines, including the geosciences, most STEM teaching remains lecture-based. Understanding the contexts that correlate with ALT adoption may allow expanded implementation. ALT use was documented among STEM pre-tenure and tenured faculty respondents across 66 research-intensive, U.S. universities, using the Change in Implementation of Pedagogical Practices survey. Personal, professional, and institutional/departmental factors were analyzed for association with ALT use. Most respondents reported using some ALTs in their teaching, with no significant distinctions between pre-tenure and tenured faculty. Teaching was perceived to carry less weight in practice (e.g., in tenure and promotion decisions) than the theoretical value stated by institutions (e.g., in faculty assignments and hiring). ALT use among tenured faculty was predicted by number of recent publications, their knowledge of education initiatives, and receiving informal feedback on their teaching. ALT use among pre-tenure faculty was predicted by the number of STEM education talks given. Perception of obstacles was a negative predictor of ALT use among tenured faculty only, though both pre-tenure and tenured faculty identified barriers to ALT use. Considering these identified barriers and how to remove them could potentially increase ALT use. The findings that ALT use by tenured faculty was predicted by number of recent publications and that grant funding was neither a positive nor negative predictor of ALT use suggest that ALT use does not hinder faculty research productivity.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank the Florida International University STEM Transformation Institute faculty and staff for organizing and hosting events to facilitate this work; participants in the HHMI Collaborative Pilot Grant Workshops for insight and feedback on this project; and the HHMI Collaborative Pilot Grant team for the initial work on developing the Change in Implementation of Pedagogical Practices (ChIPP) survey. We would also like to thank the faculty respondents of the ChIPP survey, and the faculty that assisted in survey validation and participant recruitment. This manuscript was greatly improved in response to feedback from two anonymous reviewers and journal editors, and we thank them for their reviews.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported in part by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute10.13039/100000011 under HHMI Grant #52008210. Authors were also supported in part by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute10.13039/100000011 through HHMI Grants #52006924, #52008094, #52008118. #52008097, #52008117, #52008096, and #52008116.

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