PreLecture Explorations:
A PLE is a web-based exercise that students do before they attend a lecture.
It usually consists of 5 to 7 questions that require only 10 to 15 minutes of
a student’s time to complete. It is platform independent and can contain
text, static images, video, and/or animations. Upon submission of the PLE, students
can receive an expert’s response to the same questions for comparison.
PLEs can consist of questions about a concept, problems to solve, or observation
made on viewing a video demonstration or by manipulating a simulation. PLEs
can be used to: pool data to be used to invent concepts in lecture, identify
student misconceptions to be addressed in lecture, review concepts needed as
prerequisite knowledge for a lecture topic, and practice using concepts covered
in a previous lecture. The instructor can access student responses to PLEs and
use them to customize their lecture, to address specific students’ misconceptions,
to assess students’ prerequisite knowledge, and to develop charts and
graphs of student-generated observations that can be used to invent concepts.
One of the goals of PLEs is to encourage students to come to the lecture already
thinking about the topic to be discussed. Taking large lecture classes can be
a passive experience for most students. PLEs are one method for more actively
involving them.
Examples from Fall 2003
Example 1
(first PLE of the semester)
Example 2 (calculations
only)
Example 3
(heating curve animations)
Example 4
(Bohr Animation)