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Beyond Hands On

Incorporating Kinesthetic Learning in an Undergraduate Paleontology Class

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 October 2018

David W. Goldsmith
Affiliation:
Westminster College, Utah

Summary

Hands-on learning in paleontology, and geology in general, is fairly common practice. Students regularly use rocks, fossils, and data in the classroom throughout their undergraduate career, but they typically do it sitting in a chair in a lab. Kinesthetic learning is a teaching model that requires students to be physically active while learning. Students may be involved in a physical activity during class or might be using their own bodies to model some important concept. This Element briefly discusses the theory behind kinesthetic learning and how it fits into a student-centered, active-learning classroom. It then describes in detail methods for incorporating it into student exercises on biostratigraphy, assessment of sampling completeness, and modeling evolutionary processes. Assessment data demonstrates that these exercises have led to significantly improved student learning outcomes tied to these concepts.
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Online ISBN: 9781108681544
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication: 29 November 2018

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