Monday, April 23, 2012

Third Shadowing Session


Introduction
Today our group met the instructor of the Data Structure and Algorithms course Dr. Jarkko about 15 minutes before the lecture started. The session started at 10:00 am in Metropolia university. The professor was very cooperative and well prepared. He provided us with  useful handouts explaining the course outline in general, the first lecture slides, and this lecture slides. Also he provided us with a handout of the advanced course of course he is teaching.

As understood from the professor and the handouts, the course consists of theory lectures and lab workshop. The attendance is not a must for the lecture part, but it is for the lab section.  A student has to finish all the labs and to take a final exam in the period of exam time which is at the end of the semester.

My personal reflection
In my opinion the method of learning of this course is considered to be a mixed of behaviorism and socialism. In the lecture part of the course the professor has to do all of the work of teaching, preparing, and explaining to the students. the students as our group has noticed are sitting in the class listening to the professor and take some notes if needed. The handouts are available to them through the university system. We noticed there were no any kind of interaction between the professor and the students.



As noticed by our group, the course was a very typical class and there was nothing new has been explored. In comparing, the students in this course to our students back home in somehow they acted mostly the same. Some of the students were not paying any attention to the lecture. And this is normal since the professor was doing most of the course. 


The lab part of the course which our group didn't have the chance to attend is more an interactive class than the lecture part. The students attend the lab and work on the course labs and try to finish writing the programming codes. The professor doesn't have to give and kind of lecture or lessons to the students, but he may explain clarify some issues or programming theories whenever a student asks for his help.

Again in my opinion the lab part of the course may be considered more socialism since the students may work in groups and on their own and the professor acts as if he is one of them trying to provide help whenever is needed.

Finally, I would to say that I think until to this point, learning cultures are similar to each other even though names and places are different. I think the difference is not how to prepare or teach the course, the difference is how the knowledge is implemented and link to real life. In general, it was again a nice and helpful experience being in this course and I had enjoyed this shadowing session.

2 comments:

  1. Getting the course outline and slides in advance can make the difference! I just read in Othman's blog that in the first shadowing session these weren't provided, so you really had difficult to follow the full pedagogic script. This time, although you only saw the lecture part you at least had a chance to understand that there was a more active role for the student in store!

    Traditionally (before UAS was implemented) we used to have three kinds of teachers in technical colleges. I use here physics as an example:

    - theory teachers with masters or Phd depending on the subject (for "pure" physics as a core subject one had to have Phd, but for applied physics integrated to the students vocation a masters degree was enough)

    - "exercises teachers" who supervised the sessions where calculations take place, mostly masters degree

    - lab teachers who supervised work in labs and also maintained the equipment, engineering degree from a technical collage

    When the system of UAS was implemented from the beginning of 1990 on, these traditional boundaries didn't automatically disappear! Many think that even today the separation between theory and practice exists although there are no real grounds for it. A tradition dies slowly!

    If you compare the first session and this one, you can see that the first one has attempted to dissolve the separation: the students work on their projects and the teacher gives short lecture showers, whereas in this programming class theory and application are in separate blocks.

    How is it organized in your school? Do you have separate theory classes and practical application classes? Or do you blend them together? Which one do you personally prefer and why?

    - Irmeli

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  2. Back home we have separate theory classes and practical application, but both classes are related. In other word if a student takes web programming, he has to take its practical class too, so he can't take a lab class for java programming for example. In the college where I teach I have to teach both theory and practical classes, but in some universities it is as you mentioned. The theory class is taught by a PhD professor while the practical class is given by a master degree professor. Personally I prefer the second one where two professors have to cooperative to give the classes.

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