Many K–16 educators agree that active learning is a key component for student success in life sciences. At the same time, some instructors are frustrated by inconsistent student participation in these activities and may revert to traditional teaching strategies. Horse caregivers face a similar frustration when they lead a horse to water and it will not drink. However, they do not stop offering water. Instead, horse caregivers consider two possibilities: the horse is not thirsty or the water is not good. In this article, we apply horse sense to student engagement. We start by framing common challenges within two larger categories: student mindset (“Are the student’s thirsty?”) and activity design (“Is the water good?”). For each challenge, we subsequently provide strategies to intentionally increase student learning while also empowering instructors to keep perspective.
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August 2024
Research Article|
August 01 2024
Wee Possum’s Theorem of Active Learning: Using Common Horse Sense to Engage Students in Class Activities
Bethany B. Stone,
BETHANY STONE is a Curators’ Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Division of Biological Sciences at the University of Missouri-Columbia.
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Katy Guthrie
KATY GUTHRIE is a teaching assistant professor in the Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics at the University of Minnesota.
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The American Biology Teacher (2024) 86 (6): 340–344.
Citation
Bethany B. Stone, Katy Guthrie; Wee Possum’s Theorem of Active Learning: Using Common Horse Sense to Engage Students in Class Activities. The American Biology Teacher 1 August 2024; 86 (6): 340–344. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/abt.2024.86.6.340
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