Peer
Instruction Workshop for Science and Math Teachers at Harvard University
Workshop:
March
1, 2004
Time: 5:30–8:00
pm
Location: Harvard University, 209 Pierce Hall,
29 Oxford Street, Cambridge,
MA
Are you
interested in interactive teaching?
The Materials Research Science and Engineering
Center and the Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center
at Harvard University, in conjunction with the Cambridge-Harvard GK12
Program, announce a workshop for middle and high school science and
math instructors on Peer Instruction by Professor Eric Mazur.
The
basic goals of Peer Instruction are to encourage and
make use of student interaction during lectures, while focusing students’
attention on underlying concepts and techniques. The method has been
assessed in many studies using standardized, diagnostic tests and shown
to be twice as effective as the conventional lecture approach to teaching.
Peer Instruction is now used in a wide range of science and math courses
at the college and secondary level.
In this workshop,
participants will learn about Peer Instruction, serve
as the “class” in which Peer Instruction is demonstrated,
discuss several models for implementing the technique into the classroom,
and learn about available teaching resources. High school physics teachers
Kristy Beauvais and Meghan Walbran will also describe how they have
successfully implemented the Peer Instruction method in their classrooms.
More information on Peer Instruction is available at the website galileo.harvard.edu
The workshop is free and open to science
and math teachers. The first 70 registrants will receive a copy of Peer
Instruction, A User’s Manual from Prentice Hall.
Registration deadline is February
25, 2004.
For more information, and to register,
please contact:
Kathryn Hollar, Director of Educational Programs
Division of Engineering & Applied Sciences, Harvard University
Tel: 617.496.7479
Email: hollar@deas.harvard.edu
www.eduprograms.seas.harvard.edu
Click
here to download a poster for the Peer Instruction Workshop.