GRIAL resources
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://repositorio.grial.eu/handle/123456789/1
Browse
16 results
Search Results
Item Flipped classroom insights after nine-year experience applying the method(ACM, 2021-10-27) Sein-Echaluce, M. L.; Fidalgo-Blanco, Á.; García-Peñalvo, F. J.Any new trend in Educational Innovation creates many expectations about its impact on the teaching context. This happens with the Flipped Classroom method, it presents numerous advantages: personalized learning, increased active participation, meaningful learning, autonomous learning, motivation, among others. This work collects the experience of applying the Flipped Classroom Method from 2012 up to the present. An analysis of the empirically demonstrated impact of this method on student learning is carried out. The outcome of this work is the real impact of this method in three educational environments: theoretical classes, practical classes, and teamwork competence.Item Revisión crítica del método de aula invertida desde una perspectiva basada en la experiencia(Servicio de Publicaciones Universidad de Zaragoza, 2021-10-20) Fidalgo-Blanco, Á.; Sein-Echaluce, M. L.; García-Peñalvo, F. J.; Balbín Bastidas, A. M.El método de Aula Invertida es una tendencia de innovación educativa que está en la fase de sobre-expectativas. Este trabajo recoge la experiencia de trabajar con el método de forma científica durante nueve años y aplicándolo a contextos docentes diferentes: clases teóricas, competencia del trabajo en equipo y clases prácticas de laboratorios. Toda la experiencia se aplica en asignaturas universitarias de varias titulaciones de la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. El resultado recoge el impacto real del método de Aula Invertida.Item Características del alumnado pasivo: una visión multidisciplinar(Servicio de Publicaciones Universidad de Zaragoza, 2021-10-20) Sein-Echaluce, M. L.; Fidalgo-Blanco, Á.; García-Peñalvo, F. J.Uno de los problemas del desarrollo de la innovación educativa es la transferibilidad, innovaciones en asignaturas distintas no son transferibles. Esto se debe a que la aplicación de la innovación educativa se hace de una forma local, el público objetivo es el alumnado de una asignatura. En otros sectores la innovación es altamente transferible ya que cuando se desarrolla se hace para todo un sector de público objetivo. En este trabajo de investigación se plantea la hipótesis de que es posible diseñar la innovación educativa de forma global, para todo un sector de público objetivo. El caso de estudio se ha planteado en el contexto de las innovaciones que tratan de mejorar la participación activa del alumnado. A través de una encuesta, el profesorado de distintos ámbitos educativos (infantil, primaria, secundaria, formación profesional y universidad) eligió, a partir de su propia experiencia, las características que presenta el alumnado pasivo. La coincidencia en las respuestas a la encuesta muestra que el público objetivo es global y que tiene las mismas características en distintos ámbitos educativos, luego las innovaciones relacionadas con el hábito pasivo del alumnado, son transferible entre distintos contextos.Item Hybrid Flipped Classroom: adaptation to the COVID situation(ACM, 2020-10-21) Fidalgo-Blanco, Á.; Sein-Echaluce, M. L.; García-Peñalvo, F. J.One of the first measures to fight against the COVID-19 pandemic was the confinement of the society and, consequently, the impos-sibility of providing presence-based training. For this reason, the faculty had to change the training to a completely online model, in a very short period of time and without the possibility of planning the process of change. The COVID-19 remains in our lives and continues to affect the training model. Currently, there are teachers using online training, face-to-face classes and there are even dual models where the faculty teaches both presence-based and online classes at the same time. For this reason, there is a need for training methods capable of adapting to different situations. In this work the Flipped Classroom model (a method used in face-to-face classes to make students more active) has been adapted to a hybrid model which can be implemented in any situation at any time. The model was applied during confinement in programming laboratories and the impact of this model has been measured through the works generated by students during the continuous evaluation. The result has been highly positive because the number of works presented by students the generated academic doubts have increased, as well as the average grades obtained during the continuous evaluation.Item Global Impact of Local Educational Innovation(Springer, 2020-07-19) Sein-Echaluce, M. L.; Fidalgo-Blanco, Á.; García-Peñalvo, F. J.; Balbín, A. M.The innovation is carried out according to the demands or needs of an industrial, social or economic sector and is aimed at the widest possible target audience. In teaching educational innovation, the demand for innovation is very local, it is generated in each subject and for the students of it. This causes that educational innovation cannot be easily transferred between subjects. But, to meet the demands of an educational sector, the target audience for which innovation is designed must be global. The objective of this work is to study whether teaching educational innovation can be considered globally (for a global target audience and for a need in the education sector), so that it can be applied and transferred between subjects from different contexts. The information provided, during 8 training courses, by 130 university professors belonging to 12 different universities has been analyzed. It has been shown that for a given need for improvement (passive habit in students), the profile of the target audience, the demand of the learning sector and the indicators to measure educational innovation can be raised in a common way for an entire educational sector; in this case, higher education. The conclusion is that educational inno-vation can be designed globally, applied locally and transferred to other contexts.Item The Neuro-Subject: A Living Entity with Learnability(Springer, 2021-07-26) Fidalgo-Blanco, Á.; Sein-Echaluce, M. L.; García-Peñalvo, F. J.In the context of an academic subject, students and teachers acquire knowledge and experience, but we must ensure that this experience will be shared and managed. In this way, the learning, acquired in the subject, remains in the subject. A proven way to manage the experience, which has been vali-dated in previous works, is based on considering two dimensions: the conver-sion of individual knowledge into organizational and the use of a knowledge management system that allows classifying, organizing and finding knowledge based on ontologies and inferences between them. The primary objective of this research work is to join the two dimensions and apply an active method to manage the experience acquired by the teaching staff and students. The com-bination of the models RT-CICLO, as an active method, and ACCI 3.0 to transform individual and organizational knowledge can be applied so that organizational knowledge and learning are produced in a subject. In this work we have identified the actions in which the students create knowledge, as well as the type of knowledge that is created in each case. Organizational knowledge can be generated from each action, which can also be used to promote individual student learning. In the experience also have been acquired a high perception of usefulness on the part of students with regard to all types of organizational knowledge created.Item Ejemplos de aplicación del método de Aula Invertida MFT(CINAIC, 2021-05-30) Fidalgo-Blanco, Á.; Sein-Echaluce, M. L.; García-Peñalvo, F. J.En este documento se analizarán tres ejemplos de aplicación del método Micro Flip Teaching (MFT) de Aula Invertida. Cada ejemplo se aplica en un contexto de aprendizaje distinto: clases teóricas, clases prácticas y durante la adquisición de la competencia de trabajo en equipo. Las actividades a realizar son en todos los casos las mismas básicamente, ya que se corresponden con las actividades del modelo MFT, pero cada una tiene sus peculiaridades. El objetivo del módulo es que a partir de los ejemplos citados puedan tener una guía que les facilite la aplicación.Item Tres visiones de Aula Invertida: conceptual, aplicada e híbrida(CINAIC, 2021-05-22) Fidalgo-Blanco, Á.; Sein-Echaluce, M. L.; García-Peñalvo, F. J.Si paramos a una persona por la calle y le preguntamos cuáles son los dos procesos más característicos de la formación, con toda seguridad dirá: “En clase se imparte la lección y en casa se hacen los deberes”. Esta idea es muy común a cualquier ámbito y nivel educativo. Los deberes, donde actualmente hay mucho debate sobre su conveniencia, se suelen denominar trabajos en el contexto universitario. Quizás por esta visión tan arraigada de los procesos educativos, llama la atención la descripción del método de Aula Invertida, “la lección en casa y los deberes en clase”.Item El método de Aula Invertida: Una visión histórica(CINAIC, 2021-05-19) Fidalgo-Blanco, Á.; Sein-Echluce, M. L.; García-Peñalvo, F. J.En este documento se analizará el método Aula Invertida desde el punto de vista de su desarrollo histórico para, de esta forma, dar a conocer los fundamentos a partir de los cuáles nació este método. Es importante destacar que el Aula Invertida nació en el contexto educativo; es decir, fue creado por el profesorado para ser utilizado con el alumnado. Por este motivo, este método está formado por un conjunto de procesos bien conocidos por el profesorado y que son, por tanto, fáciles de aplicar. A continuación se desarrollarán los siguientes puntos: 1. Para qué sirve. Describe la razón por la que se creó el método e identifica el problema que quiere resolver. 2. En qué consiste. Describe la forma en la que consigue resolver el problema identificado en el punto anterior. 3. Cuándo surge y cómo se desarrolló. Describe cuándo se popularizó el método y los distintos nombres que ha tenido, de los que algunos se conservan hasta la fecha actual. 4. El modelo original. Analiza el modelo de funcionamiento; esto es, el conjunto de procesos y la secuencia de los mismos.Item Impact of Transparency in the Teamwork Development through Cloud Computing(MDPI, 2021-04-25) Sein-Echaluce, M. L.; Fidalgo-Blanco, Á.; García-Peñalvo, F. J.; Fonseca, D.Active educational methodologies promote students to take an active role in their own learning, enhance cooperative work, and develop a collective understanding of the subject as a common learning area. Cloud Computing enables the learning space to be supported while also revolutionizing it by allowing it to be used as a link between active methodology and students’ learning activities. A Cloud Computing system is used in conjunction with an active methodology to recognize and manage individual, group, and collective evidence of the students’ work in this research. The key hypothesis shown in this work is that if evidence management is made clear and evidence is consistently and gradually presented to students, their level of involvement will increase, and their learning outcomes will improve. The model was implemented in a university subject of a first academic year using the active Flipped Classroom methodology, and the individual, group and collective evidence is constantly worked with throughout the implementation of a teamwork method.