Skip to main content

Polling in the classroom: Poll Everywhere

www.PollEverywhere.com is a really fun service that will accommodate teachers for free.
Go ahead and make an account and have fun!

Voting is always anonymous since it’s the free version.
You create as many polls as you want. The students respond in your choice of ways:
Embed a cool voting widget on your class page
Send them a link via email
Put the link on your class page
Tell them to vote during non-school hours (different type of assignment) using either text messaging or with a smartphone/iPod touch.

You and your students can view a graph of responses as they come in!

You can do something like Beth Brewer did during her assembly… or you can ask students to gather data at home and report it… Or you can gather free response answers. All answers can be organized and downloaded.

Comments

  1. I have used Poll Everywhere in my freshmen classes to find out their responses about assessment. Students enjoyed the fact that their responses were anonymous and that they could vote on various topics. I found it very easy and accessible to use and I hope to use it again in class- maybe as a pre or post reading activity.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Thanks for your input!

Popular posts from this blog

Anatomy online

www.zygotebody.com used to be Google Body using Zygote's imagery... now Zygote owns it. Use FireFox!!! You can switch from male to female, select a body system like skeletal, cardiovascular, etc. Rotate and zoom... The left side has sliders to move from one system to another, or slide horizontally to turn on and off systems. You can have several on at once. You can search for things by name, and pin them so they stay put when switching systems. I noticed that when a pin or label has a blue + sign, clicking it expands that label to more sub-labels that you can pin. Try this with the brain stem! The program requires WebGL, which seems to not be included in IE...and doesn't work on iPad's safari browser either. But works fine in FireFox!

Infographics - "More than words can say"

We've seen man eye-catching and engrossing infographics lately. Here's a great one... http://www.studyblue.com/projects/infographic-mobile-studying-online-flashcards-on-smartphones/ and here's "40 useful infographics " that present a range of styles and topoics . http://sixrevisions.com/graphics-design/40-useful-and-creative-infographics/ Here's a mini course on infographics in education, designed by the NY Times: http://learning.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/23/teaching-with-infographics-places-to-start/ And here's a great list of infographic information and samples: http://www.delicious.com/jkrauss/infographics As a teaching tool, here's a list of infographic sources: floating sheep: www.floatingsheep.com cool infographics : www.coolinfographics.com GapMinder : www.gapminder.com information is beautiful: www.informationisbeautiful.net But what about having students CREATE infographics as projects? Here's a great article! htt...

LanSchool does Polling!

All teachers should be using LanSchool to monitor and restrict what students are doing in class... there are other more appropriate times to shop for prom dresses, work on art, and look at pictures of their favorite stars. But POLLING is a really great way to engage all of your students, and for you to use formative assessment. Simply use the VOTE button on LanSchool to send everyone a question, and you see the anonymous results as they are submitted. You can even prepare questions ahead of time and load on the fly so you are not typing them in while students wait. Please ask Laura or David (or Jamie!) how to do this. Or give it a try in class, it's simple. We have other ways to poll students , like PollEverywhere .com, but they take more time to setup. However PollEverywhere can be a web link that students access 24/7 for out-of-class polling.