- Flipped classroom is now a very well known widely used term in certain educational circles, giving students the opportunity when they come to class to do work, to actually engage in problem solving in productive ways whether individually or in groups collaboratively, and to solve problems and to apply the learning that you have acquired through your own research, through your own readings and through your own usage. You know, accessing online materials is going to be more productive than having two or three hundred students come to a lecture hall to take notes. - I think it is a very good brief summary of what's the content of the lecture. Sometimes you will miss the principles when hearing the lectures and in videos you can pause it anytime and repeat it and then hear it again. Firstly I think that to have the first review of lecture online is a good way to learn because it saves a lot of time in lecture and during lecture we can now have more discussions with our classmates. And we have some groups assigned to us so it's going to be a really fun one because we are doing something really "in daily life". Of course our focus is duty of care but I do want you to think about any other issues as well. At the moment when the classroom begins, presenting them with a problem, a common problem that they will all solve. They will all firstly brainstorm and discuss and then attempt to solve and then write about and then present on, all in a two-hour period. We have a very nice hall, lecture hall, so that we can set up all these tables for hundreds of people. It's interesting for us to get involved and discussing with the students so that we know actually what kind of questions they will want to raise when they first see a problem. It's an interesting experience not just for the students but also for tutors as well. It's very much different from holding or conducting tutorials in a traditional in-class setting. We as tutors were able to just dip in and out to help guide them with a gentle hand. They really took the responsibility upon themselves not only to prepare for this session but then to actively solve the problem and lean on each other in doing so. If a hospital, having been notified that there's a patient in trouble, they don't notice, they don't know his condition, so we don't need to say, "is it foreseeable that a man with a heart attack will arrive?" No that's not the point. The point is, he is there. Like you said, he is there. Today's last flipped class, we can have group discussions over specific issues. That's the way of applying some legal principles on the issue, on the problem. And we have practised very little in the previous lecture so it's a very good way for me to apply what we have learnt into some real cases. My opinion regarding this mass group class is very positive. I feel that it's very engaging and it really makes students voice their opinions and one of the best things about this class is that you have to learn to juggle different opinions. Very stimulating, unsorted opinions on the spot. And you'll also have to learn how to express your own opinions in the best way possible. When you talk about your argument and then they will give you feedback and what they think. And sometimes they actually supplement you with their knowledge that maybe you haven't read about that in the book, and so I find it really challenging on one hand and fruitful when you discuss with your classmates. It's proved to be quite, well I shouldn't say, successful, neither should I say yet effective, but it has certainly received the ringing endorsement of the students who are about 96 or 97 percent in favour of continuing with flipped learning they have been provided and a range of reasons why they feel their learning is more enriched, why it is a more useful, more valuable form of learning over a lecture, the passive lecture. We're moving forward and it will continue to evolve but I'm quite satisfied at this stage that it was the right move. I'm really happy to see students so keenly engaged in work, working with each other on the very material that I want them to master as opposed to sitting there and taking notes.