When students arrive at university, they may feel that they have left the days of playing with Lego long behind.
Not so, if they find themselves in seminars with Pat Cullum, a principal lecturer in history at the University of Huddersfield.
She has experimented with using Lego to help first-year undergraduates grapple with tricky intellectual concepts, and believes that it has the potential to improve learners’ understanding.
This approach builds on the theory that physical manipulation of an object can help students to think, and to articulate their ideas.
Dr Cullum tested the approach as part of a module dealing with the history of ideas, in which students had been reluctant to engage with the topic of gender.
Teams of students were invited to look at historical texts and to construct Lego models exploring the treatment of gender issues in response.
One group built a model of the Garden of Eden, with Adam standing below God on a tall blue pillar and Eve, the supposed sinner, having been ejected.
Dr Cullum then invited the students to create a game inspired by a historical text.
Among the responses was a Second World War scenario based around the writings of the French feminist Simone de Beauvoir, which featured male Allied and Axis soldiers and a female Resistance fighter.
Feedback indicated that students had enjoyed the exercise, and Dr Cullum said she believed it had helped them to move from concrete thoughts towards more abstract thinking.
“Some said they weren’t sure that it had helped them to think the issues through, but when they went on to write more they said it made them think like a ‘proper historian’,” Dr Cullum said. “Then I looked at some of their coursework and more of them were interested in the subject, and had carried on working on it, than I would have expected.”
Dr Cullum said that Lego should probably be used in teaching only as an introductory tool, and on an occasional basis, with its novelty value being key to its success.
But she said that it was an approach that could be used to ensure that students had genuinely engaged with ideas, rather than having merely written down what they were told without understanding the conceptual framework behind it.
There is increasing evidence for the benefit of a “gamification” approach to learning, Dr Cullum added.
“It is a technique that does engage attention and, if you have people engaged, they are more likely to be thinking for a longer time and at a deeper level about what you are using the gamification approach on,” she said. “That is likely to lead to deeper and more thorough learning.”
Huddersfield is not the only UK higher education institution to be taking an interest in the role of Lego in learning.
Last month, the University of Cambridge said that it had accepted a ?4 million donation from the Lego Foundation to establish a professorship of play in education, development and learning, and an accompanying research centre.
<榴莲视频>Appointments榴莲视频>
The University of Birmingham has appointed two new pro vice-chancellors to oversee its teaching and research strategies. Tim Softley will take up the post of pro vice-chancellor, research and knowledge transfer, while Andy Schofield is to become pro vice-chancellor and head of the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences. Professor Softley joins in September from the University of Oxford. Professor Schofield is currently head of the School of Physics and Astronomy at Birmingham.
Mark Emberton has been appointed dean of the Faculty of Medical Sciences at University College London. He is currently director of the UCL Division of Surgery and Interventional Science.?
A Newman University professor has been awarded a visiting fellowship at Trinity College, University of Glasgow. Susan Docherty is head of theology and religious education at Newman and will take up the William Barclay distinguished visiting fellowship in biblical studies at Glasgow between January and March 2016.
Maria Delgado has been appointed director of research at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama. Professor Delgado joins from Queen Mary University of London after nearly two decades at the institution. Previously she held positions at the University of Hull and Manchester Metropolitan University. She takes up her new post at the beginning of the next academic year.