Principle 4: Effective Learning Environments
What is an effective learning environment?
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The term ‘learning environment’ is a broad one, and refers to spaces, places, attitudes and relationships that students encounter as they learn. As teaching practitioners, we have the power to design, foster and weave together learning environments to ensure that students have an effective and engaging learning experience.
The Blended Learning Framework outlines in practical terms how you can optimise physical and digital learning spaces, and how you can foster communication with and between students. It will help you design a balance of synchronous activities (students learning together at fixed times) and asynchronous activities (students learning at their own pace). Manninen et al. (2007) define learning environments under five categories, outlined below.
Before exploring them in more detail, bear in mind that students undergo many transitions into, through and out of their study with us. Whilst each student is unique, there are processes that are common to all students. This Student Lifecycle map follows the journey of our undergraduate students, including common ‘pain points.’ Planning proactively to guide students at these pain points and fostering helpful dialogue ensures that learning environments remain effective. Student Mentors can also have a key role in this.
More on Effective Learning Environments?
You could explore our Flipped Learning toolkit page.
Mini Deeper Dive into Learning Environments
Pedagogical Approaches
Having a clear approach to how you will teach students is a crucial step towards designing effective learning environments. Whatever approaches you take, ensuring your students are active participants in their learning is key. These 6 top tips might help you to get started.
Social and Collaborative Aspects
It is especially important that synchronous activities are designed to enable students to establish learning communities. Carefully crafted activities will allow students to construct knowledge together, establish supportive groups, develop their abilities, and fuel the motivation that will drive their learning forward outside formal classroom settings (Slavin, 1996).
Physical Places
It is best to think about physical and digital elements of your course as ‘blended’; effective learning environments see the digital and physical designed together. For instance, the lecture theatre is not a purely physical space when the lecturer uses digital tools to present and engage; students use digital tools to respond, work and communicate, and artefacts of the lecture are studied online afterwards. What matters regarding this blend is how we communicate with students about their learning, how we establish what is expected of them, and how we capture learning that occurs outside formal spaces. One of the ways staff should do this is with module maps, a popular approach with students.
However, it is worth bearing in mind the physical learning spaces you and your students share. While simply changing a physical space may not be possible, it is anyway unlikely to directly impact on student learning: it is the change in approach to learning and teaching that will improve student outcomes (Ellis, 2019). For instance, designing active learning opportunities that take advantage of a more socially orientated space.
Technologies Used
As noted above, the technologies used should be chosen alongside the pedagogical approaches for the programme. For instance, a flipped approach might require technologies to support student learning in the Digital Learning Environment and then digital engagement tools for deeper learning together in the classroom. This Word document shows how to design your DLE spaces as a place where students are directed to return for meaningful communication and activity outside of lectures.
Evaluate the affordances and constraints of different tools and platforms when deciding which to include in your approach. It is worth doing this as a programme team to ensure that students are not overwhelmed with the number and variety of technologies and processes across your programme, module or session: ‘keep it simple’ is a good guiding approach.
Off-Campus Settings for Contextual Learning
Take time to consider how purposeful trips and placements could be arranged and how the learning could be maximised and / or assessed. Consider how purposeful trips might support learning differently – for example, how and why might it different being in a lecture hall/ seminar room compared to being in a hospital, field, theatre etc? What experience does this afford for the learner?