“…Given the current results, a complementary vision of activating teaching methods and lectures tends to be appropriate and effective, as advocated by the results of the present study, or as suggested by the findings of Chisholm, Dehoney, and Poirier (1996), Michel (2001), Richardson and Birge (1995), and Woo and Kimmick (2000). In fact, from the students' perspective, the active nature of the teaching methods is not the primary feature that constitutes good teaching, but rather the criteria: pace of instruction and clarity (Fisher, Alder, & Avasalu, 1998). Interestingly, another often observed routine to explain negative results of the promising constructivist theory and its applications is to attribute these results to students' adaptation difficulties in the transition from traditional lectures to activating, independent learning/teaching settings (Novak, Shah, Candidate, Wilson, Lawson, & Salzman, 2006;Salamonson & Lantz, 2005;Vermetten, Vermunt, & Lodewijks, 2002).…”