Writing an effective case study is innovative approach /the key for the future of students and one of the best ways to prove your worth is through these case studies.
The use of applied case studies at NSPL RTC can therefore be a very effective training technique. They can be used in any discipline when faculties want students to explore how what they have learned applies to real world situations.
Advantages to the use of case studies
An innovative approach to case analysis might be to have students role-play the part of the people
involved in the case. This not only actively engages students, but forces them to really understand
the perspectives of case characters.
Videos or even field trips showing the venue in which the case is situated can help students
to visualize the situation that they need to analyze.
Case assignments can be done individually or in teams so that the students
can brainstorm solutions and share the work load.
To understand the objective, read and examine the project or case thoroughly and about the organization and follow the steps given below:
Most cases have these common elements:
To solve that problem use different tools, technologies and uncover possible solutions:
Case studies can be especially effective if they are paired with a reading assignment that introduces or explains a concept or analytical method that applies to the case. The amount of emphasis placed on the use of the reading during the case discussion depends on the complexity of the concept or method. If it is straightforward, the focus of the discussion can be placed on the use of the analytical results. If the method is more complex, the instructor may need to walk students through its application and the interpretation of the results.
Write a case study in a proper format.
The formats of these cases can vary. They can be standard written cases, movies or movie clips, or even TV or news stories. Regardless of the type of case, they all:
Whether your case study is primarily written or visual, we recommend focusing on the seven-part outline, below.
Once you've completed your case study, it's time to publish and promote it
as PowerPoint presentations. Here are a couple of things in mind during
publishing a case study:
During presentation, you have to explain your case study in an interesting way and catch
the attention of audience’s as well as team will give you suggestion to make changes
in your case study.
Decision cases are more interesting than descriptive ones. In order to start the
discussion in class, the instructor can start with an easy, noncontroversial question
that all the students should be able to answer readily. However, some of the best case
discussions start by forcing the students to take a stand. Some instructors will ask a
student to do a formal “open” of the case, outlining his or
her entire analysis. Others may choose to guide discussion with questions that move students
from problem identification to solutions. A skilled instructor steers questions and discussion
to keep the class on track and moving at a reasonable pace.
In order to motivate the students to complete the assignment before class as well as to stimulate
attentiveness during the class, the instructor should grade the participation—quantity and especially
quality—during the discussion of the case. This might be a simple check, check-plus, check-minus or zero.
The instructor should involve as many students as possible. In order to engage all the students, the instructor
can divide them into groups, give each group several minutes to discuss how to answer a question related to the
case, and then ask a randomly selected person in each group to present the group’s answer and reasoning. Random
selection can be accomplished through rolling of dice, shuffled index cards, each with one student’s name, etc.