My claim that the lecture remains justifiably at the heart of university education is rejected by Graham Gibbs in his rather condescending appeal to authority, in which he compares me (along with other sceptical academics) to ill鈥慽nformed students who 鈥渟pout nonsense鈥 and appear as if their 鈥渃orpus callosum has been severed鈥 (鈥Split-brain scholarship鈥, 12聽December 2013).
Unfortunately for him, research attempts to 鈥渟cientifically鈥 establish the inherent inferiority (or superiority) of any particular pedagogical approach are unlikely to succeed.
For聽a start, such approaches are impossible to聽clearly define: for example, when does a聽鈥渓ecture鈥 incorporating interactive elements become a 鈥渨orkshop鈥? Further, the individual qualities of the 鈥渓ecturer鈥 present a large set of confounding variables, as does the nature of the students 鈥 the course they are studying, the specific topic, their own personal attributes and so on. Given this complexity, claims that unambiguous and generalisable cause-effect relations can be established between modes of pedagogy and their effectiveness amount to聽little more than pseudoscience.
Of course, poor-quality lectures are frequently encountered by students and this is to be regretted; however, low-quality pedagogy is certainly not the preserve of the lecture. By contrast, excellent lectures not only educate in a narrow sense, but can be truly inspirational, too. I have had the privilege of attending 鈥渟ell-out鈥 public lectures by Richard Dawkins and Carl Sagan; most of their audiences appeared to be greatly inspired by the experience.
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Presumably Gibbs and others ideologically opposed to lectures would deprecate the value of such events, on account of the enduringly fashionable notion that research evidence has established them to be ineffective.
Of course, most university lectures will not be delivered by figures of the prominence of Dawkins or Sagan, nor will the performances be as polished; nevertheless, it is not unreasonable to expect undergraduates to benefit from thoughtfully constructed lectures carefully delivered by highly knowledgeable academics.
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Still Gibbs claims that the lecture is a demonstrably ineffective pedagogic form that in some cases is worse than 鈥渘o teaching at all鈥. Really? A lecture is merely a formalised version of an age-old and very human method of imparting ideas: namely, a knowledgeable individual standing up and verbally explaining a particular theme or idea. (Indeed, this simplicity may underlie contemporary educationalists鈥 disdain for the approach.) It would be quite incredible if the practice were 鈥渋neffective鈥 or worse than nothing at all.
I suggest that the onus lies with Gibbs et al to demonstrate the rank inferiority of the lecture: from the published literature I have read, convincing evidence of this sort has most certainly not been forthcoming.
Kevin Smith
University of Abertay Dundee
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