DR13 said:
The main issue is that the fully directed labs bore students and do not really help them learn because [...]
One of the AAPT New Faculty sessions was in regards to labs, and was led by a couple of profs who had written a 'student self-directed' lab manual. Their aim was to address exactly what you bring up- and their claim was that, by letting the students self-direct, the learning experience is improved.
I'm not convinced: to make their point, we were broken into teams and given a pile of stuff (batteries, LEDs, a comb, some wires, and some plastic lenses). We were given a "topic of investigation" (in this case, refraction), and some questions to answer. Seems reasonable.
Well. I took the guys at their word- they wanted us to self-direct. So, my lab partner and I played. Turns out you can generate quite a lot of cool optical effects with a comb, none of which has anything to do with refraction or lenses. Besides that, we had fun just playing with the LEDs.
When I brought this up in discussion (that self-directed students may not address the topic at hand), the profs admitted that they go through a lot of LEDs and batteries from students intentionally mis-wiring things... since they are told to 'do whatever they find interesting'.
Now, factor in safety issues: our labs routinely use high voltage supplies, open flames, etc. etc. We simply cannot allow students to 'play'.
Freshman and intro labs are really about developing *technique*- keeping a lab book, obtaining and analyzing data, introducing them to specific measurement methods and apparatuses (apparati?).