Difference between revisions of "Spiral"

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Topics in a course are often interrelated and knowledge of many topics are required for a student to solve a problem.  Organize the course so that many different topics are introduced to students, focusing only on essential details and not covering them completely at first viewing.<ref name="Bergin2012"/>         
Organize the course to introduce topics to students without covering them completely at first viewing so that a number of topics can be introduced early and then used. The instructor can then return to each topic in turn, perhaps repeatedly, giving more of the information needed to master them.<ref name="Bergin2012"/>         


==Context==
==Context==

Revision as of 12:08, 9 August 2016


Spiral
Contributors
Last modification August 9, 2016
Source Bergin et al. (2012)[1]
Pattern formats OPR Alexandrian
Usability
Learning domain
Stakeholders

Organize the course to introduce topics to students without covering them completely at first viewing so that a number of topics can be introduced early and then used. The instructor can then return to each topic in turn, perhaps repeatedly, giving more of the information needed to master them.[1]

Context

Problem

Forces

Solution

Consequences

Benefits

Liabilities

Evidence

Literature

Discussion

Data

Applied evaluation

Related patterns

Example

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Bergin, J., Eckstein, J., Völter, M., Sipos, M., Wallingford, E., Marquardt, K., Chandler, J., Sharp, H., and Manns, M.L. (2012). Pedagogical patterns: advice for educators. Joseph Bergin Software Tools.