Flipped vs. Traditional: An Analysis of Teaching Techniques in Finance and Psychology

Recently there has been a surge of interest in technology-aided teaching strategies such as the flipped classroom. Given the growing interest in these techniques, it is important to critically evaluate their effectiveness and to begin to examine factors that might shape how effective the flipped cl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael Robert Andreychik, Valeria Martinez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Calgary 2019-09-01
Series:Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/TLI/article/view/57588
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spelling doaj-9fc53ed25d1644108b875231b6d1b17c2020-11-25T03:19:40ZengUniversity of CalgaryTeaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal2167-47792167-47872019-09-017210.20343/teachlearninqu.7.2.10Flipped vs. Traditional: An Analysis of Teaching Techniques in Finance and PsychologyMichael Robert Andreychik0Valeria Martinez1Fairfield UniversityFairfield University Recently there has been a surge of interest in technology-aided teaching strategies such as the flipped classroom. Given the growing interest in these techniques, it is important to critically evaluate their effectiveness and to begin to examine factors that might shape how effective the flipped classroom will be in a given educational setting. Although most existing research on the flipped classroom suggests an advantage of the flipped approach over a more traditional lecture approach, most of this research has been conducted in a single educational setting at a time and in ways that preclude definitive conclusions about the relative effectiveness of the flipped approach. We present the results of a study that addressed many of these methodological limitations and compared the effectiveness of the flipped approach to a traditional lecture approach across two semesters in courses from two different disciplines, finance and psychology. We found that the effectiveness of the flipped versus the traditional approach varied across the two courses. In particular, in the psychology courses the flipped approach resulted in superior performance on quizzes administered immediately after exposure to course material, but resulted in similar performance on exams administered some time after initial exposure. In contrast, in the finance courses the flipped approach resulted in similar performance on immediately administered quizzes, but superior performance on later-administered exams. These results contribute to the burgeoning literature on the flipped classroom both by addressing methodological limitations found in previous work and by identifying some of the specific conditions under which the flipped approach may be a good pedagogical choice. https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/TLI/article/view/57588confounding variablesfinanceflipped classroompsychologypvideo lecture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Robert Andreychik
Valeria Martinez
spellingShingle Michael Robert Andreychik
Valeria Martinez
Flipped vs. Traditional: An Analysis of Teaching Techniques in Finance and Psychology
Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal
confounding variables
finance
flipped classroom
psychologyp
video lecture
author_facet Michael Robert Andreychik
Valeria Martinez
author_sort Michael Robert Andreychik
title Flipped vs. Traditional: An Analysis of Teaching Techniques in Finance and Psychology
title_short Flipped vs. Traditional: An Analysis of Teaching Techniques in Finance and Psychology
title_full Flipped vs. Traditional: An Analysis of Teaching Techniques in Finance and Psychology
title_fullStr Flipped vs. Traditional: An Analysis of Teaching Techniques in Finance and Psychology
title_full_unstemmed Flipped vs. Traditional: An Analysis of Teaching Techniques in Finance and Psychology
title_sort flipped vs. traditional: an analysis of teaching techniques in finance and psychology
publisher University of Calgary
series Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal
issn 2167-4779
2167-4787
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Recently there has been a surge of interest in technology-aided teaching strategies such as the flipped classroom. Given the growing interest in these techniques, it is important to critically evaluate their effectiveness and to begin to examine factors that might shape how effective the flipped classroom will be in a given educational setting. Although most existing research on the flipped classroom suggests an advantage of the flipped approach over a more traditional lecture approach, most of this research has been conducted in a single educational setting at a time and in ways that preclude definitive conclusions about the relative effectiveness of the flipped approach. We present the results of a study that addressed many of these methodological limitations and compared the effectiveness of the flipped approach to a traditional lecture approach across two semesters in courses from two different disciplines, finance and psychology. We found that the effectiveness of the flipped versus the traditional approach varied across the two courses. In particular, in the psychology courses the flipped approach resulted in superior performance on quizzes administered immediately after exposure to course material, but resulted in similar performance on exams administered some time after initial exposure. In contrast, in the finance courses the flipped approach resulted in similar performance on immediately administered quizzes, but superior performance on later-administered exams. These results contribute to the burgeoning literature on the flipped classroom both by addressing methodological limitations found in previous work and by identifying some of the specific conditions under which the flipped approach may be a good pedagogical choice.
topic confounding variables
finance
flipped classroom
psychologyp
video lecture
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/TLI/article/view/57588
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