Don’t believe the anti-lecture myths, says Glasgow vice-principal

Educationalist argues ‘religious’ zeal of active-learning advocates ignores the importance of the traditional lecture

July 12, 2018
James Conroy
James Conroy speaks at the Teaching Excellence Summit

Calls to replace the traditional lecture with more interactive teaching miss the value of “slow and difficult learning” and ignore evidence supporting its educational importance, a conference has heard.

In a fiery debate at Times Higher Education’s Teaching Excellence Summit, James Conroy, the University of Glasgow’s vice-principal for internationalisation, hit back at claims that lectures almost always delivered worse student outcomes than “active learning”, in which students typically work in small groups, calling the claims “half-baked nonsense” and “horse manure”.

Contrary to recent claims about the ineffectiveness of lecturing, there is a large body of evidence – including studies by the University of California, Los Angeles educationalists Robert and Elizabeth Bjork – that suggests that long-term “retention and recall is stronger than people imagine” from lectures, said Professor Conroy.

“We have persuaded ourselves that the attention span of students is very short [and] desiccated…so we have created a learning system that meets these low expectations,” Professor Conroy, professor of religious and philosophical education, told delegates at the event, held at Glasgow.

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Speaking in a separate session, Professor Conroy said that “the idea that the lecture is a lousy place to learn is a self-fulfilling prophecy”, which led to poor preparation of lectures and badly received talks, adding that universities should “defend slow and difficult learning”.

“This is not to condemn active learning – of course we use many different types of teaching – but it is an appeal for a bit of balance,” he said.

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Professor Conroy’s defence came in response to a keynote lecture by Carl Wieman, a Nobel prizewinning physicist from Stanford University who has lately focused on how to improve science teaching. In his address, he stated that “there is no point in lecturing any more” because active learning led to better student learning than lecturing in almost every scenario. Student engagement rates are 40 per cent higher when active learning is used compared with lectures, while dropout rates were more than 50 per cent lower, according to studies contained in his 2017 book Improving How Universities Teach Science.

Asked if good lecturing produced better student outcomes than badly done active learning, Professor Wieman replied that the “research suggests ‘no’”. “In some cases they may be equivalent, but there are no cases I know about where even reasonable active learning does not beat good lecturing,” said Professor Wieman, who added that there is “no evidence where active learning underperforms lecturing”.

Even though some online lectures on YouTube and other platforms received tens of millions of hits, this popularity gave no clue about the learning value of such talks, Professor Wieman told delegates.

“Pornography has lots of hits, celebrity scandals get hits – I give them no credit for hits, so come back and show me how these [measures] correspond to learning,” he said.

Speaking to THE, however, Professor Conroy said that the traditional lecture still worked well when done right because it “requires concentration, analysis and judgement” from students, which were key skills demanded by employers.

The supposed unanimous verdict against lecturing actually reflected “confirmation bias” among researchers who did not acknowledge significant studies showing the efficacy of the lecture, he added. 

The desire to abolish lectures was “almost religious” in its fervour and was similarly based mostly on belief rather than evidence, Professor Conroy continued. It was linked to another mistaken belief that graduates required new and different skills from those possessed by previous generations to cope with the so-called Fourth Industrial Revolution, he added.

“Students need tomorrow what they needed yesterday – the capacity to think, reflect, engage and turn things upside down,” said Professor Conroy.

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jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com


Watch Carl Wieman's presentation and the following Q&A

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Has the death of the lecture been greatly exaggerated?

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Reader's comments (3)

Conroy is right about the self-fulfilling nature of the lecture's alleged uselessness. However, people like Wieman are capitalizing on a perfect storm with regard to contemporary higher education: 1. Many lectures -- as a matter of fact -- do not offer value for money. 2. The neo-liberal audit culture is always on the lookout for alternative practices that provide more value for money than the current ones. 3. Wieman works in a field -- physics -- where there are clear learning outcomes, which makes it relatively easy to compare alternative teaching approaches (notwithstanding the tradition of charismatic lecturers, such as Richard Feynman). 4. Academics have largely forgot that the lecture was designed for students to see what it looks like for a knowledgeable person to speak in their own voice.
Interesting that Wieman uses a lecture format, to explain why there is `no point in lectures anymore'...
Lectures were never supposed to be the only thing used to teach students. In my studies, lectures were always followed by tutorials/seminars every week. Comparing lectures and active learning by themselves is stupid; they are supposed to go together. Recently I have experienced reverse classrooms while studying physics (reverse classroom instead of lectures). I was assigned roughly 8 chapters per week to read from a textbook (sometimes much more), and then went straight into the reverse classroom. The problem was that there was too much content so I wasn't able to really grasp the concepts before going into the reverse classroom. Lectures were needed to condense the information in the chapters and highlight the important parts, and then active learning/reverse classroom tutorials. Everything was so much harder because we had no lectures.

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