{"id":33989,"date":"2020-03-09t09:30:08","date_gmt":"2020-03-09t14:30:08","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/?p=33989"},"modified":"2020-03-04t15:31:37","modified_gmt":"2020-03-04t20:31:37","slug":"teaching-innovations-at-vanderbilt-derek-bruff-and-cryptography-escape-rooms","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/2020\/03\/teaching-innovations-at-vanderbilt-derek-bruff-and-cryptography-escape-rooms\/","title":{"rendered":"teaching innovations at vanderbilt: derek bruff and cryptography escape rooms"},"content":{"rendered":"
by faith rovenolt, cft undergraduate intern<\/em><\/p>\n during spring 2020, the teaching innovations at vanderbilt blog series will highlight teaching innovations that cft staff have implemented and evaluated in their own courses. <\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n <\/a>i heard about dr. derek bruff\u2019s<\/strong> teaching innovation before i started working at the cft from my freshman ra. she had been in bruff\u2019s first-year writing seminar (fyws), math 1111, <\/strong>on cryptography and had loved it. it\u2019s easy to understand why when i learned about how bruff designed a course-themed escape room.<\/p>\n bruff\u2019s fyws for the math department incorporates learning and using ciphers and codes as well as their history. additionally, the course regularly discusses relevant current news on the application and implications of encryption for modern privacy and surveillance. students hone their writing skills through technical and popular writing. for example, bruff has students describe the story of a specific cipher or code. previous students\u2019 works have been published on the wonders & marvels blog<\/a> and bruff has now made it a podcasting assignment<\/a>.<\/p>\n bruff also includes an activity that gets students working together to apply what they\u2019ve learned in class. a little past halfway through the course, after students have already learned how to solve and use ciphers, there is a \u201cflex day\u201d planned in the syllabus. on that day, when students walk into the classroom, they are greeted with a code written on the chalkboard and a lockbox. the clue on the board leads them to another and then another for a total of about four or five clues to open the box. each clue is written in code and requires students to apply what they\u2019ve learned in the course and work together in this classroom-equivalent of a cryptography-themed escape room. inside the lockbox is often candy and a second lockbox with a clue to open that. within the second lockbox is a prize which varies from year to year. one year, the prize was a congratulatory message recorded by the author of a novel students read for class.<\/p>\n students thoroughly enjoy the escape room. as one of bruff\u2019s students said on the course evaluation: \u201cthis is what i came to college for.\u201d students enthusiastically participate and have taken selfies and posted them on social media, tagging them #flexday. students get a chance to apply what they\u2019ve learned\u2014and realize just how much they\u2019ve learned. it\u2019s a fun way to synthesize many aspects of the course while getting students out of their comfort zone and engaging students who might not be active in the class day-to-day.<\/p>\n