What is it?

Interrupted case studies is an instructional strategy designed to actively engage students in their learning. This strategy provides programmed interruptions, or pauses for thought and debate, which gives students an opportunity to work together and practice critical thinking. After being given information in a logical order, students are encouraged to investigate the facts, pose questions, and forecast future events. Following that, the students review their predictions after receiving new information. Giving students information from case studies in bite-sized chunks spaced out by overtime can teach students how to apply ideas and come up with workable answers to issues. In addition, a student’s critical thinking style, which is a gauge of their propensity for critical thought, can reveal how they approach problem or issue solving.

Skills Promoted

  • Critical thinking
  • Argumentation skills
  • Inductive reasoning
  • Analytical reasoning
  • Knowledge integration

Who's using it?

SALTISE community members who use this strategy and are willing to share advice and/or resources.

Institution Discipline Instructor Classroom settings

McGill

Level: University

Engineering

Marta Cerruti

Activity - Interrupted Case Study in Material Engineering

Classroom size: Small (20-49)

View resources used

John Abbott

Level: College & CEGEP

Biology

Beth Acton

Activity - Don’t go NUTS: A Case Study on the Physiology of Stress

Classroom size: Small (20-49)

View resources used

Institution

McGill

Level: University

John Abbott

Level: College & CEGEP

Discipline

Engineering

Biology

Instructor

Marta Cerruti

Beth Acton

Classroom settings

Activity - Interrupted Case Study in Material Engineering

Classroom size: Small (20-49)

View resources used

Activity - Don’t go NUTS: A Case Study on the Physiology of Stress

Classroom size: Small (20-49)

View resources used

Why use it?

Benefits
Challenges
Benefits
  • Students are more involved in the subject matter and are in a better position to draw parallels with real world applications
Challenges
  • In order to finish the assignment in a single class session and to ensure that the students are applying the material knowledge correctly, an instructor should provide feedback and guidance to the student groups as they work through each section of the case study.
  • Spend more time facilitating and less time presenting so students have as much time as possible to work with the case study and their analysis. This is because learning happens as the students work with the case study.

Helpful resources

References

Herreid, C. F. (2004). Can case studies be used to teach critical thinking?. Journal of College Science Teaching.

Herreid, C. F. (2005). Using case studies to teach Science education: Classroom methodology. American Institute of Biological Sciences, ERIC.

Video

SALTISE Workshop: Design Virtual Case Studies and Branching Scenarios Using Open Labyrinth – Leaders: David Topps (University of Calgary), Krista Bulow (Dawson College), Catherine Roy (Dawson College), Jason Lapointe (John Abbott College)