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College Level Flippers

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College Level Flippers

Are you interested in designing a flipped college curriculum? 

Upper level math courses are great for this.  If you teach at a small university and cannot offer every upper-level math course every semester, you can have students taking DIFFERENT courses in the same classroom with the same instructor.  I call it the "one room schoolhouse" model.  It's cost-effective, flexible, and allows small schools to offer a great variety of low-enrollment courses.  I am slated to teach this way next year.

If you're flipping in college, I'd love to hear from you.

Members: 102
Latest Activity: yesterday

Discussion Forum

Flipped materials database 8 Replies

Hello,Is anyone aware of a database of flipped materials that includes written content (textbook) designed specifically for the flipped classroom?  I haven't been able to find anything that has…Continue

Started by Anna Davis. Last reply by Krista Maxson on Saturday.

Humanities/Social Sciences/Arts at College Level?

Is anyone in this group teaching a flipped class in non-STEM areas?  I'm a STEM person myself, but I have been approached by various colleagues in other fields who are curious about flipping but are…Continue

Started by Renee Link May 10.

College Flipped Classroom Trainer? 4 Replies

Hey everyone, I am in the process of writing an internal grant to support our Department wide adoption of the Flipped Classroom model. We plan on phasing it in one class this fall and expand from…Continue

Started by Scott Gabriel. Last reply by Scott Gabriel Mar 6.

Who is flipping? 23 Replies

I would like to know what colleges are doing some flipping (the name of a professor would be nice but not needed), in what subjects, and at what level of courses (lower level or upper level).  I will…Continue

Started by Troy Faulkner. Last reply by Michael Kramer Feb 6.

Comment Wall

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Comment by Ridvan Aliu on August 10, 2012 at 5:49pm

Has anyone tried to use EDUonGo.com for Higher Education Flipped Classrooms ?

EDUonGo is an amazing Learning Environment that was built, from the ground up, for flipped classrooms.

Here is a video tour of EDUonGo:

Enjoy :) !!!

Ridvan

Comment by recon77 on August 10, 2012 at 11:11am

Ellen

Would you be interested in possible research ON your flip class?

Comment by Ellen Turnell on August 10, 2012 at 10:01am

I teach at a large community college in Houston Texas.  I will be flipping my Intermediate Algebra Class this fall (2012).  I have 35 students registered for the class.  If anyone has done this, PLEASE give suggestions.

Comment by Brett Westbrook on February 14, 2012 at 10:24am

I teach a senior Capstone course at a small denominational university. It's an intensive writing/research course their senior year. I'm very interested in flipping the writing classroom. Anyone else out there doing this at the college level with writing courses?

Comment by Anna Davis on January 20, 2012 at 4:50pm

Jerry,

I teach at Ohio Dominican University in Columbus Ohio.  I will be teaching an Intro to Proofs class (it should have about 12 students in it) and Topology (2 students) at the same time.  This is really exciting because we would never be able to offer topology as a regular course.

I am also working on a module for pre-calculus.  The module is based on a student activity article I co-authored called "Rational Functions: A New Perspective" (Mathematics Teacher, March 2011)

My ultimate hope is to establish a network of colleges/idividuals who produce and share materials.  This would allow smaller schools to utilize the wide range of expertise that such a consortium would offer.

If anyone is iterested in collaborating, I would love to hear from them.

What courses do you teach? A while ago I saw that you posted some references to research in this area, including your own research - that's really helpful, Thanks!

Comment by Jerry Overmyer on January 20, 2012 at 2:34pm

Anna, This sounds like a great idea! A few years back 4 universities (Colorado State, Portland State, Montana State, Montana, Northern Colorado) did this with graduate courses in mathematics education. It was great, but sort of fizzled out after the grant. 

What school are you at? I am currently at University of Northern Colorado and know a professor at Colorado State University who would be interested in this. 

What courses are you slated to teach?

 

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