Skip to main content

Chem students review using student response system


Our chemistry teacher has broken ground by using "clickers" to gather student responses to review questions before a test. Lucky for her, her text book includes multiple choice assessments for every chapter in PowerPoint format!

Formative assessment is challenging, and this tool gives her immediate feedback in order to review only questions the class needs to review. It also lets her identify students who need more individual help.

We downloaded class lists from our SMS, and uploaded them as "participant groups" in the software from Turning Technologies. Then it is simple to display the powerpoint slideshow on the projector with the response system tool at the top. By starting and stopping the system for each question she builds the session data needed to generate reports about the class in general and individual students.

Our teacher used her new Eno board pen to work out the problem solutions and quickly delete the "ink" to move on to the next question. In the future she can save these solutions, move to blank boards for more room to work, etc. It takes practice before taking full advantage of all the available tools.

100% engagement, a fun atmosphere, quality review time, and data! What more could you ask for during a chapter review! Well done!

Comments

  1. Jamie - We use a similar idea in our chem classes. We have "clicker questions" provided to us by some of the publishers in the form of Power Points. Each student has a clicker and use this to answer the question on the smartboard.Once they have their answer, every student (clicks A, B, C, D,etc) responds. Then we show the correct answer and the graph of responses to show the class not who, but how many answered wrong. For example, if most of the class answered wrong, I would stop and do another example to reinforce or reteach the concept. Not only is it 100% engagement, but the students love it! And we have time to stop and review/reteach as necessary or move quickly through the concepts they have already mastered. In addition, we upload the exact clicker questions to the topics page so that they can go home and review those same questions.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I wrote this about OUR chem class. :-)

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Thanks for your input!

Popular posts from this blog

Use Polling for formative assessment in a Flipped Lesson

I like the term "flipped lesson" for now, since none of our teachers have flipped everything they do! Here is a nice article about how using Poll Everywhere (a free online polling system) can give your feedback after students watch a video or uploaded lecture, etc. If the poll is well designed, it can provide information about what material needs further instruction, gather excellent questions for the next class, etc. Click this link for the article... http://blog.polleverywhere.com/flipped-classroom-assessment-with-poll-everywhere/?utm_source=Poll+Everywhere+New+Feature+Newsletter&utm_campaign=30d3b12e48-Winter_Newsletter_2013_Gen_Olders_3_star_2_2013&utm_medium=email

Digital Storytelling

Digital storytelling is a broad term for an audio/visual “report” which can be a cultural story, historical biography, poetry, interview, news story, radio advertisement or book review, first person account or journal entry...any digital project can be seen or heard. I saw many examples at CUE, and they range in complexity from simple audio to audio with images to documentary “movies” with audio, video and still images. Some of the projects moved us to tears, others were humorous, and all were creative and intelligently constructed. Our laptops have the capability to do any of these things, and most students know how to organize images, sound and video already. If you have an upcoming assignment or project in your class and would like to update the format, please let me know. After a planning session with me, I will come in and facilitate the class while you provide the support for the subject matter. Links to explore: http://techteachers.com/digstory/examples.htm http://www....

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...