Roles matter: Graduate student perceptions of active learning in the STEM courses they take and those they teach

Sci Prog. 2021 Oct;104(4):368504211033500. doi: 10.1177/00368504211033500.

Abstract

Despite many calls to reform undergraduate science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education to incorporate active learning into classes, there has been little attention paid to graduate level classrooms or courses taught by graduate students. Here, we set out to understand if and how STEM graduate students' perceptions of active learning change in the classes they take versus those they teach. We found that graduate students had taken relatively few graduate level classes using active learning and they felt that more time should be devoted to active learning in the courses they were taking. Teaching assistants felt that they were devoting the right amount of class time to active learning in the classes they taught. Graduate students also felt that they were using teaching methods in the classes they taught that were different from those they thought should be used when teaching undergraduates and were different from how they preferred to learn when taking classes.

Keywords: Active learning; education reform; future faculty; graduate student; professional development; teaching assistant.

MeSH terms

  • Engineering* / education
  • Humans
  • Mathematics
  • Problem-Based Learning*
  • Students
  • Technology