Team-Based Inquiry Learning

Open Resources and Research supporting Active Learning in Mathematics

About TBIL

What is TBIL?

Team-Based Inquiry Learning (TBIL) is an implementation of Team-Based Learning as Inquiry-Based Learning for mathematics. Team-Based Learning is popular in other disciplines such as health sciences, where it is most often implemented as Flipped Learning and/or Case-Based Learning. In mathematics, however, we view it as a way to more easily bring Inquiry-Based Learning into lower division courses such as Precalculus, Calculus, and Linear Algebra.

A typical day in a TBIL class involves students working teams through a series of scaffolded activities to learn the material. After spending time on an activity, each team simultaneously reports their answer to the class, after which the instructor facilitates a class-wide debrief to inquire into students' thinking. After bringing the class to a consensus, the instructor provides any needed exposition to prepare students for the next activity. For more details on the TBIL pedagogy, please see our PRIMUS paper.

To help instructors get started, we host a library of free and open-source educational resources aligned for use with TBIL.

Join the Community

If you're planning to use TBIL in your classroom, you can get a link to join our Slack community by completing this survey. Joining our Slack allows you to chat with other community members and TBIL experts.

Publications

Selected mentions in other literature

Presentations

(† TBIL Fellows)