During problem-based learning sessions, undergraduate students were tasked with answering chemistry-related questions using clicker-handset technology in which the last response made by each handset would override any previous vote. The benefits, if any, of showing cohort responses from clicker questions during versus after polling were explored. Preliminary work suggested that cohort responses shown live during polling created greater unprompted peer instruction, which was inferred from a noticeably louder level of classroom debate. To test if subtle polling changes can promote greater peer instruction, this study monitored cohort performance, clicker response times, and voting-behavior patterns throughout the polling process. Profiling i...
Active learning involves shifting some control of the learning environment from the teacher to the l...
While technology in the form of laptops and cellphones may be the cause of much of the distraction...
Peer bias is recognised as a primary factor in negative student perceptions of peer assessment strat...
Using personal response systems (more commonly known as clickers in the classroom is an effective st...
Peer bias is recognised as a primary factor in negative student perceptions of peer assessment strat...
Clicker questions are a commonly used active learning technique that stimulates student interactions...
\u27Flipped\u27 or \u27inverted classroom\u27 approaches have been shown to enhance the effectivenes...
A study was conducted at an urban Title I high school in Southern California to explore the effects ...
In-class response systems, or clickers, are useful formative assessment tools that support learning ...
Thesis (M.S., Chemistry)--California State University, Sacramento, 2012.The use of student response ...
The article presents a mixed methods study on clicker interventions conducted in collaboration with ...
Research into the uses of personal response systems or ‘clickers’ shows that their use increases st...
[[abstract]]Clickers, formerly known as instant response systems, have gradually become an integral ...
In this study we describe a novel use of clickers in a second year computer science module. In recen...
The use of personal response systems, or clickers, is increasingly common in college classrooms. Alt...
Active learning involves shifting some control of the learning environment from the teacher to the l...
While technology in the form of laptops and cellphones may be the cause of much of the distraction...
Peer bias is recognised as a primary factor in negative student perceptions of peer assessment strat...
Using personal response systems (more commonly known as clickers in the classroom is an effective st...
Peer bias is recognised as a primary factor in negative student perceptions of peer assessment strat...
Clicker questions are a commonly used active learning technique that stimulates student interactions...
\u27Flipped\u27 or \u27inverted classroom\u27 approaches have been shown to enhance the effectivenes...
A study was conducted at an urban Title I high school in Southern California to explore the effects ...
In-class response systems, or clickers, are useful formative assessment tools that support learning ...
Thesis (M.S., Chemistry)--California State University, Sacramento, 2012.The use of student response ...
The article presents a mixed methods study on clicker interventions conducted in collaboration with ...
Research into the uses of personal response systems or ‘clickers’ shows that their use increases st...
[[abstract]]Clickers, formerly known as instant response systems, have gradually become an integral ...
In this study we describe a novel use of clickers in a second year computer science module. In recen...
The use of personal response systems, or clickers, is increasingly common in college classrooms. Alt...
Active learning involves shifting some control of the learning environment from the teacher to the l...
While technology in the form of laptops and cellphones may be the cause of much of the distraction...
Peer bias is recognised as a primary factor in negative student perceptions of peer assessment strat...