Active Learning Versus the Traditional Lecture Methods of Teaching at Higher Education Institutions: A Case Study of Learners’ Preferences at the Department of Business Education, Addis Ababa University

Authors

  • Firdissa Jebessa Aga Lecturer and Researcher, Institute of Educational Research

Abstract

The main purpose of this study was to assess learners’
preferences of the active learning versus the traditional lecture methods of
teaching at Higher Education Institutions (HEIs). The method most
commonly utilized, the level of the learners’ satisfaction about the methods
and the reasons for the identified level were also deliberated on. In doing so,
a detailed questionnaire was dispatched to a purposively selected 45 third
year students at the Department of Business Education, Addis Ababa
University (AAU) who were taking the course General Methods of Teaching
with the researcher during the first semester of the year 2003/04. The
results of the quantitative and qualitative analyses of the data disclosed that
many of the teachers at the Department were most commonly using lecture
method of teaching and yet, the learners preferred the active learning to the
traditional lecture method of teaching. The lecture method is found to be
less effective in stimulating interest, promoting creativity, or helping students
develop responsibility, imagination, and skills in synthesizing, internalizing,
or self-expressions. It is, therefore, recommended that teachers at the
Department of Business Education in particular and those at different
departments in the University in general should be able to consider learners’
preferences in deciding the method to deliver their lessons.

Published

2021-02-21