Monday 25 February 2013


In his 2012 book Teaching Naked:  How Moving Technology Out of Your College Classroom Will Improve Student Learning, SMU dean Jose Antonio Bowen advocates the removal of technology from the post-secondary classroom, and replacing it with sessions that maximize the opportunity for students to apply online content in a face-to-face interactive way that will enhance their learning.

Bowen's thesis is that technology has offered instructors a template for delivering content online, before class.  The corollary is that the traditional method of delivering a first exposure to content, the classroom lecture, may be as dead as the dodo. 

To this, Bowen offers a heartfelt "amen."  For him, lectures are poor transmitters of content, and even worse tools for classroom learning.  Instead, class time should be spent creating value.  In education, this means the development of critical thinking skills.

Bowen argues that class time is the proper forum for developing such skills.  The delivery of content is better suited to the online world that technology invites us to utilize.

Bowen's message is delivered with passion, and his statistics suggest that if institutions of higher learning do not adapt to the technological environment millenials are wired into, they will find that their students will vote with their feet, and purchase cheaper, more customized, and ultimately more fulfilling experiences elsewhere.  That message is frightening.

The implications for my own mode of teaching are no less unsettling.  I teach law courses, and they are highly content-driven.  If I downloaded podcasts of my lectures that students might review before class, what would I do during class time?  I'd have to develop entirely new assessment tools, and lesson plans incorporating exercises that would engage my students in the higher level cognitive skills that underlie an ability to think critically.

That entails a lot of work.  As Bowen points out, it would also require me to focus more on what the students are learning, rather than what I am teaching.  Substituting monitoring and mentoring for the delivery of content will mean a loss of control, potentially, and that makes me a bit nervous.

Bowen's argument is that with the exception of the few elite institutions who can continue to rely on their brand to fill seats in lecture halls, the traditional residential colleges and universities must adapt to what students really want, or risk disappearing entirely.  Increasingly, students are seeking an education that has value, which means that they may not continue to absorb the high cost of the traditional post-secondary education, unless the institutions offering it are able to demonstrate it results in significant learning that will be of use after graduation.  In Bowen's view, the delivery of content in class can be accessed more cheaply elsewhere, and it fails to leverage the opportunity for more significant learning that face time with an instructor, and other students, can provide.

Class time that consists of lectures, and a reliance on Powerpoint, is often boring. Having said this, a concern I have about downloading content onto students for review preclass is that it may exponentially increase the amount of work they will be doing in each course, which may in turn cause them to rebel.  Sitting in a lecture hall and listening to an instructor deliver content may not be exciting, but it is certainly less work.  And if instructors are not lecturing, some students may feel that they have been short-changed.

As an instructor, I recall that the best teaching experiences involved lively interactions with students.  One can get a hint of interactions of that type in lectures, when a student will ask a question, but it seems to me that is merely the tip of the iceberg.  In order for students to be truly invested in the material, a departure from lectures is absolutely necessary.

The courses I teach involve a lot of content.  Some of these courses require that the stipulated content be delivered in order for my institution to receive accreditation.  I have not employed technology to any significant degree in order to supplement what I say in class, and so it is content that absorbs much of class time at my disposal.  Several of my students have indicated that I am a good lecturer.  I feel good about that, but I am left feeling that the experience could be better.

Bowen's suggestion that the content be jettisoned from class time is worth pursuing because it offers up an opportunity for the students to go to the next level in class.  I suspect that many students will not be happy about this, because it will require them to spend more time prepping, and it will force them to be active participants when we get together in class.  It will also require me to focus my class time on developing ways for my students to work with the material, and to allow them to acquire a deeper appreciation of the nuances that lurk within it.

The re-orientation that teaching naked offers will be a challenge for all, at least initially.  However, the content will still be delivered, and the opportunity to make a more profound investment in thinking about it that the time freed up in class will offer should pay major dividends.

Sunday 24 February 2013

February 24, 2013.

A little about me.  I am a lawyer in private practice in Kelowna, British Columbia.  For many years I was a trial lawyer, but in the last several years, my practice has focused on mediation and arbitration.  I am also a professor in the Okanagan School of Business at Okanagan College in Kelowna, where I teach law courses.

In my recreational life, I paddle voyageur canoes down the major river systems of Canada and the northern United States, along with a dedicated cadre of other water warriors.

The primary purpose of this blog is to share my thoughts on education, and how curricula should be delivered at the post-secondary level.

Sunday 10 February 2013

Welcome to my blog

Hi, I'm creating my blog, as we speak.  More to come, when the urge strikes me.