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Comparing student, instructor, and expert perceptions of learner-centeredness in post-secondary biology classrooms

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  • Ashley B Heim
  • Emily A Holt

Abstract

Learner-centered classrooms encourage critical thinking and communication among students and between students and their instructor, and engage students as active learners rather than passive participants. However, students, faculty, and experts often have distinct definitions of learner-centeredness, and the paucity of research comparing perspectives of these different groups must be resolved. In the current study, our central research question was how do student, faculty, and expert observer perceptions of learner-centeredness within biology classrooms compare to one another? We sampled 1114 students from fifteen sections of a general biology course for non-majors, and complete responses from 490 students were analyzed. Five valid and reliable tools (two faculty; two student; and one expert observer) evaluated the learner-centeredness of each participating section. Perceptions of learner-centered instructors often aligned with those of expert observers, while student perceptions tended not to align with either group. Interestingly, students perceived learner-centered instructors as less learner-centered if they taught at non-traditional times and/or in large-enrollment sections, despite their focus on student learning. Perceptions of learner-centeredness in the biology classroom are complex and may be best captured with more than one instrument. Our findings encourage instructors to be cognizant that the approaches they employ in the classroom may not be interpreted as learner-centered, in the same manner, by students and external observers, particularly when additional course factors such as enrollment and scheduling may encourage negative perceptions of learner-centered practices.

Suggested Citation

  • Ashley B Heim & Emily A Holt, 2018. "Comparing student, instructor, and expert perceptions of learner-centeredness in post-secondary biology classrooms," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 13(7), pages 1-25, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0200524
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200524
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