How to use flipped learning to support your learners
What is flipped learning?
To understand better what flipped learning is, first let’s see how it differs from blended learning, a term with which it is often confused.
Blended learning is a way of teaching that combines face-to-face classroom teaching with online resources. We freely use online resources to create a more personalized learning experience.
Flipped learning is a little different. As the name suggests, it "flips" a traditional lesson. It tells us exactly which stages of the lesson should go online. In a flipped learning class, all of the more traditional aspects (also called "study stages"), are completed online and the homework (also called "application stages") comes into the classroom.
Let’s look at an example.
A typical receptive skills lesson normally has six stages:
- Lead in
- Set context
- Pre-teach vocabulary
- Gist task
- Detailed task
- Follow up
With a traditional teaching model, we do the first five stages in class and set the last one for homework. With flipped learning there are a few ways to tackle these stages, but a basic model would look like this: