Helpful Hints: The Art of Teaching, Not Telling - Fulcrum Labs (2024)

Remember the old saying: “give a man a fish and you feed him for a day, but teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime”?

The same is true in learning, especially when it comes to feedback. Giving students the correct answers as a primary form of feedback is a lot like giving them a fish. They might be able to pass the test tomorrow, but for deeper learning that can be carried well into the future, they need more. We have to teach them to fish. Meaning, we have to help students pursue the underlying principles of the subject matter (not just the facts) so that they can remember more of what they’ve learned, be able to apply it and innovate more freely.

Teaching Learners to “Fish” Through Hints

One way that’s proven to help students “fish,” and take ownership of knowledge, is a hint-based, elaborated feedback model. Within this model, detailed components guide students to successful task completion without immediately providing knowledge of the correct response.

In fact, several researchers have concluded that feedback is significantly more effective when it provides details of how to improve an answer, rather than just indicating whether the learner is correct or incorrect (e.g. Bangert-Drowns et al., 1991; Pridemore Klein, 1995). Additionally, research shows that response-specific feedback (a fancy way of saying feedback on a specific answer choice) enhances student achievement, particularly learning efficiency, more than other types of feedback, like simple verification or “answer until correct” (e.g. Corbett and Anderson, 2001; Gillman, 1969; Mory, 2004; Shute, Hanson and Almond, 2007).

Why Hints Work

Hint-based feedback is so effective because it:

  • Builds cognitive scaffolding –Organizing feedback into helpful hints – ones that either point the student in the direction of the correct answer or explain why their current answer choice is incorrect – provides a form of cognitive scaffolding on which to build new learning (Hartman 2002). These types of hints support the learner until the content becomes so well engrained that it, in and of itself, serves as a scaffold for the next learning (Vygotsky, 1987). Indeed, research into hint-based feedback shows an overlap between students who systematically use hints and better performance.
  • Supports self-efficacyand motivation – Elaborated feedback (e.g. hints, cues and good-to-know information) offers opportunities for students to engage in mastery experiences, or moments of success. By giving a hint, rather than the correct answer, students have another chance to practice, another chance to succeed. These mastery experiences are one of the most important sources for developing positive self-efficacy, or positive perceptions of one’s competence (Bandura, 1997; Usher and Pajares, 2006). And they can, in turn, impact a student’s motivation. It turns out that people who have a high level of self-efficacy – or confidence in their ability to complete a task/achieve a goal – are more likely to remain motivated in pursuit of said learning/goal and are much more resistant to failure and setbacks.
  • Addresses needs of adult learners Andragogy tells us that adult students (including college-age learners) have a clear concept of self and do not like others imposing their wills on them. They don’t want to be controlled; rather they want to be able to practice ownership over their own learning. Hints, as opposed to other controlling-and-correcting forms of feedback like “repeat-until-correct” or “error flagging,” provide higher ed students with the environment they need to learn more successfully and control their own metacognitive process.

Hints within Fulcrum

All this research supports our system’s hint-based feedback model. Our platform is designed to perform like a virtual, one-on-one tutor. Within each course in our platform, students can practice their skills with a series of adaptive assessments and not be penalized for incorrect answers. Rather, the platform’s AI guides them toward learning the correct knowledge with answer-specific hints for every question. For example, questions often have common wrong answers; our hint feature presents specific pieces of knowledge and insights that give people an opportunity to learn the correct answers. And instead of simply giving a single hint per question, Fulcrum helps students learn the correct answers by delivering hints based on their unique answer choices, just like a personal tutor would. (In other words – our hints aren’t one-size-fits all.)

And just like a one-on-one tutor would, our system also provides this hint feedback in the moment – the time that research tells us is most critical for efficient retention of the content (Phye and Andre, 1989).

See the examples below for three different variations of hints within a single question in the Fulcrum Platform:

Helpful Hints: The Art of Teaching, Not Telling - Fulcrum Labs (1)

Example 1 (above): A multiple-choice assessment in a Critical Thinking Section of a course wherein a student has chosen “evidence” as their answer selection. This answer is incorrect. But rather than providing the right answer, Fulcrum’s platform gives a helpful hint that points the student toward the accurate information.

Helpful Hints: The Art of Teaching, Not Telling - Fulcrum Labs (2)

Example 2 (above): The same question as Example 1, but a different answer selection highlights the variation in Fulcrum’s hint capabilities. Here, the student has selected “judgments”, which is also an incorrect answer. The student has chosen to show the hint and take advantage of this short tip. Hints can include text, images or even external links

Example 3 (below): A“Good To Know” hint once a student has selected the correct answer provides context and further elaboration that, in turn, improves retention.

Helpful Hints: The Art of Teaching, Not Telling - Fulcrum Labs (3)

As always, the platform incorporates its machine learning capabilities to collect and analyze data regarding hint efficacy, use and students’ subsequent behavior. This data informs both our internal learning experts and the system’s AI, and enables us to optimize hints based on performance and behavior metrics.

Deep learning requires that students think critically and arrive at the answer on their own, rather than being spoon-fed. Hints are a perfect way to guide them toward mastery of the content, improve knowledge application and enhance performance. In fact, this notion goes to the very heart of the Fulcrum Labs mission: To turn students into learners and learners into confidence subject matter masters.

If you’re interested in learning more about how Fulcrum provides students with the optimal feedback to meet their learning needs, let schedule a demo so you can see our tutor-like AI and machine learning behind the adaptive curtain. We’ll also show you ourlibrary of 11 academic courses and 3 skills courses, such as Steps to Success and Fundamentals of Reading & Writing – all Fulcrum-enabled and all off-the-shelf ready for deployment in higher education classrooms.

You can also learn more about our adaptive platform from this short overview video.

Related Articles:

https://www.the-fulcrum.com/blog/poor-time-management/

https://www.the-fulcrum.com/blog/mastering-goal-setting/

https://www.the-fulcrum.com/blog/massed-vs-spaced-procrastination/

Tags:Competency-Based LearningKnowledge ApplicationLearning ContentLearning Culture

Helpful Hints: The Art of Teaching, Not Telling - Fulcrum Labs (2024)

FAQs

How to teach without giving the answer? ›

How to do it:
  1. Step 1: Teacher provides students with a prompt prior to class (open ended question).
  2. Step 2: Students have one to two minutes to think and jot down answers individually.
  3. Step 3: Teacher places students in small groups and allows each student time to go over their answers with group members.
Aug 26, 2020

What are the common mistakes in demonstrating a lesson? ›

Avoid these THREE mistakes in demonstration lessons
  • Mistake #1: Too much complexity.
  • Mistake #2: Too much technology.
  • Mistake #3: The wrong type of activities.
Jan 19, 2022

How to give hints to students? ›

Hints may be as simple as showing someone how to use a tool or giving them an equation or as specific as including a reminder about a common mistake made on a question. Hints can help keep your activities rigorous without making them unnecessarily long.

What is the silent teacher technique? ›

The method emphasizes learner autonomy and active student participation. Silence is used as a tool to achieve this goal; the teacher uses a mixture of silence and gestures to focus students' attention, to elicit responses from them, and to encourage them to correct their own errors.

What is the no opt out technique? ›

No Opt Out is a powerful method of supported accountability in a classroom. Any student who answers a question is responsible for giving the correct answer in that moment. Mistakes are not ignored, punished, or cause for embarrassment, but a part of the learning territory.

What makes a lesson unsuccessful? ›

Types of Failed Lessons

A lesson may assume too much prior knowledge, may be at the wrong level, may be superseded by something else that's drawing students' attention. Similarly, a lesson may work beautifully with first block and flop in second block. A lesson that worked in 2019 might bite it in 2022.

What are the characteristics of a poor lesson? ›

These characteristics are as follows: wastage of students' time, poor mastery of the subject, source of boredom to students, partial treatment of students, lack of respect for students, low level of self-confidence, poor mastery of teaching skills, emotional immaturity, inappropriate dressing, injurious to students, ...

How do you give indirect hints? ›

You need to know their communication style and how they perceive things. You also need to be clear about the message you want to convey and the outcome you want to achieve. Once you have this clarity, you can start giving hints through nonverbal cues, such as body language or tone of voice.

How to teach positive behavior? ›

Teaching Your Child Positive Behaviors
  1. Find joy with your child.
  2. Notice your child engaging in positive behaviors.
  3. Make household rules and routines and review them with your child regularly.
  4. Let your child know about transitions ahead of time.
  5. Give clear directions.
  6. Help your child name their feelings.

How do you answer without giving an answer? ›

10 Ways to Avoid Answering a Question
  1. 10 Ways to Avoid Answering a Question.
  2. No comment.
  3. I'm not at liberty to say. (= I don't have permission to give the information)
  4. Wait and see. ...
  5. Let me get back to you. ...
  6. I'm sorry, that's confidential.
  7. I'm sorry, that's personal.
  8. I'd rather not talk about it.

What is the silent method of teaching? ›

Summary. The Silent Way is the name of a method of language teaching devised by Caleb Gattegno. It is based on the premise that the teacher should be silent as much as possible in the classroom but the learner should be encouraged to produce as much language as possible.

How can you help a child understand something without simply giving them the answer? ›

3 Ways to Help Your Child with Homework… Without Giving Them the Answers
  1. Always give encouragement and praise to your child. Being a positive role model for your child will help them approach homework and learning very differently. ...
  2. Teach your child how to create and organize plans. ...
  3. Model learning behavior.
Mar 3, 2022

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