Sara Blanc, José V. Benlloch Dualde, Ginés Benet Gilabert
Research carried out in recent years suggests that students in Higher Education are not always motivated and lack thelearning skills and work habits to overcome first-year difficulties at the university. As a consequence, the approach toteaching the subject was to blame for allowing a significant number of dropouts and underachievement. Starting fromseveral educational experiences carried out since 2005, this paper presents an overall model with the emphasis on student-centered learning and formative feedback. The teaching approach is based on good practices that are supported bycommonly available technology resources so as to maintain a manageable faculty workload. Technical resources are a veryhelpful resource to face large groups of students without losing learning feedback quality, but it is not a solution per se.Thus, on-line activities have been designed to support individual formative feedback with asynchronous teacherinteraction, while face-to-face learning is still very important and oriented to promote peer interaction and collaboration.The presented model has produced successful results during several consecutive academic years with samples of more than500 students per year and the participation of 11 lecturers. This work analyses quantitative indicators to demonstrate thatteachers are able to carry out a reliable representation of their student progress, despite the use of different student-centeredactivities. Generally speaking, student active participation has grown significantly, achieving 65% success. The model andits starting conclusions can be extrapolated to many high education courses.
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