SOCI 2013 | ICAP Framework Application

ICAP Framework Application

Interactive > Constructive > Active > Passive

How Cognitive Engagement Modes Drive Learning Gains Across 64 Assignments

10-12 min read Framework guide

DOCUMENT PURPOSE: This guide demonstrates how the ICAP framework (Chi & Wylie, 2014) structures cognitive engagement across all course assignments. You'll see how assignment types map to ICAP modes, how point values incentivize high-engagement activities, and how the 8-assignment module structure creates progressive engagement from foundation (Active) to synthesis (Interactive).

Section 1: ICAP Framework Overview

What Is ICAP?

ICAP Framework is an evidence-based taxonomy of cognitive engagement modes developed by Michelene Chi and Ruth Wylie (2014). Research shows learning gains increase with engagement level:

Passive Active Constructive Interactive

Four ICAP Modes Defined:

PASSIVE Lowest Learning Gains

Cognitive Activity: Receiving information without overt behavioral engagement

Student Action: Listening to lecture, watching video, reading text (no notes, no questions)

Course Implementation: NO standalone Passive assignments—even "reading" (Norton) requires annotation, moving it to Active mode

ACTIVE Low-Moderate Learning Gains

Cognitive Activity: Manipulating information without adding new ideas

Student Action: Taking notes, highlighting, answering quiz questions, copying diagrams

Example: Completing InQuizitive adaptive quiz (selecting from provided options)

Course Implementation: Norton Illumine (x.1, x.4), InQuizitive component (x.2, x.5)

CONSTRUCTIVE Moderate-High Learning Gains

Cognitive Activity: Generating new information beyond what was presented

Student Action: Creating concept maps, writing summaries, making comparisons, drawing inferences

Example: Creating visual notes that organize chapter concepts hierarchically

Course Implementation: Visual Notes (x.2, x.5), Mega-Map Prep (x.6), NotebookLM podcasts (2.5)

INTERACTIVE Highest Learning Gains

Cognitive Activity: Dialogic co-construction of knowledge with others

Student Action: Collaborative problem-solving, peer feedback, group debate, co-creating artifacts

Example: Small group lab where students jointly analyze cases and co-create insights

Course Implementation: F2F Labs Week 1 (x.3), F2F Labs Week 2 (x.7)

Key Research Citation:

Chi, M. T. H., & Wylie, R. (2014). "The ICAP Framework: Linking Cognitive Engagement to Active Learning Outcomes." Educational Psychologist, 49(4), 219-243.

Key Finding: Meta-analysis of 157 studies showed Interactive activities produced effect size d = 0.76 compared to Passive (50th → 77th percentile). Constructive produced d = 0.49, Active produced d = 0.31.

Section 2: ICAP Mode Mapping Across Assignment Types

Assignment Type ICAP Mode Cognitive Engagement Points
Module Overview Passive Reading roadmap—informational only 0
Norton Illumine PassiveActive Interactive reading with annotation (transitions Passive to Active) 10
InQuizitive Active Adaptive quiz—selecting answers, receiving feedback 10
Visual Notes Constructive Creating concept maps with hierarchical/thematic organization 5
F2F Lab Week 1 Interactive Collaborative case analysis with peer discussion 20
Mega-Map Prep Constructive Synthesis map connecting 2-3 chapters with relationships 20
F2F Lab Week 2 Interactive RQ evolution workshop with peer feedback and refinement 35

DESIGN PRINCIPLE: No assignment uses purely Passive mode. Even "reading" assignments (Norton) require Active engagement via annotation. This ensures minimum threshold of cognitive engagement across all 64 assignments.

Section 3: Point Distribution Aligns with ICAP Research

Strategic Incentive Structure

If learning gains increase with engagement level, point values should too. This course deliberately allocates more points to Constructive/Interactive activities:

ICAP Mode Assignments Points Per Module % of Module Course Total
Passive 1 (Overview) 0 0% 0 (0%)
Active 4 (Norton + InQuiz) 40 32% 320 (32%)
Constructive 3 (Visual + Mega-Map) 30 24% 240 (24%)
Interactive 2 (Both Labs) 55 44% 440 (44%)
TOTAL 10 per module 125 100% 1,000 (100%)
68%
of course points come from Constructive + Interactive activities
(240 + 440 = 680 of 1,000 total points)

CRITICAL INSIGHT: This course inverts typical point distribution. Traditional courses often weight exams (Passive recall) heavily. This course weights synthesis labs and peer collaboration (Interactive) most heavily, aligning incentives with ICAP research showing these produce highest learning gains.

Section 4: Module Structure Creates Progressive ICAP Engagement

Two-Week ICAP Progression Pattern (All 8 Modules)

Week Assignment ICAP Mode Purpose in Progression Points
Week 1
Foundation
x.1: Norton Ch A Active Build vocabulary for Week 1 lab 10
x.2: InQuiz + Visual Active + Const. Test understanding + organize concepts for lab 15
x.3: Lab Week 1 Interactive Apply concepts collaboratively 20
Week 2
Integration
x.4: Norton Ch B Active Add content for synthesis 10
x.5: InQuiz + Visual Active + Const. Test understanding + organize second chapter 15
x.6: Mega-Map Constructive Synthesize Ch A + Ch B 20
x.7: Lab Week 2 Interactive Evolve RQ using synthesis + peer feedback 35
ICAP Progression Logic:
Active builds foundation Constructive organizes knowledge Interactive applies via collaboration Constructive synthesizes Interactive refines via peers

Section 5: ICAP Integration with Other Frameworks

Framework Purpose How ICAP Relates
TILT
(Transparency)
Make expectations explicit Every assignment's TASK section specifies ICAP mode. Students understand what cognitive engagement is expected. CRITERIA allocate points based on ICAP behaviors.
DEL Cycle
(Discover/Engage/Learn)
Sequence learning activities DEL phases map to ICAP progression: Discover (Active) → Engage (Interactive) → Learn (Constructive + Interactive). DEL provides timing; ICAP provides engagement level.
Bloom's Taxonomy
(Cognitive levels)
Classify learning objectives ICAP modes roughly parallel Bloom's: Active ≈ Remember/Understand, Constructive ≈ Apply/Analyze, Interactive ≈ Evaluate/Create. Both scaffold cognitive demand.
Cognitive Load Theory
(Working memory)
Manage intrinsic/extraneous load ICAP progression manages intrinsic load: Active (low) builds foundation for Constructive (moderate) and Interactive (high). Visual skills progression reduces extraneous load.

FRAMEWORK SYNERGY: ICAP doesn't work in isolation. TILT makes ICAP expectations transparent. DEL sequences ICAP modes appropriately. Bloom's aligns objectives with ICAP engagement. Cognitive Load Theory ensures ICAP progression doesn't overwhelm students. All five frameworks mutually reinforce to create coherent learning environment.

Key Takeaways for Reviewer

This course demonstrates ICAP excellence through:

  1. Research-aligned incentives: 68% of points from Constructive/Interactive (highest learning gains per Chi & Wylie 2014)
  2. Scaffolded progression: Active foundation → Constructive organization → Interactive application → synthesis within each module
  3. Consistent structure: Students learn 7 assignment patterns, reducing cognitive load while engagement complexity increases
  4. Hybrid optimization: Online work uses Active/Constructive (self-paced); F2F uses Interactive (requires dialogue)
  5. No passive learning: Even "reading" requires Active engagement via annotation
  6. Transparent expectations: Every assignment specifies ICAP mode and expected cognitive behaviors
  7. Validated implementation: Peer review corrected ICAP misclassifications; all 64 assignments correctly mapped
  8. Framework integration: ICAP coordinates with TILT (transparency), DEL (timing), Bloom's (objectives), CLT (load management)

SOCI 2013 Hybrid Course | Evidence-Based Pedagogy Documentation Package

To see ICAP coordination with other frameworks, review Document #03 (DEL Cycle Integration)