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"Sweet, Michael S" <[log in to unmask]>
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Fri, 16 Oct 2009 12:42:54 -0500
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Friends,

I am working with someone in history to overhaul a 80-300 student class into full-on TBL.

Due to the volume of paperwork that so many students would generate, we are planning to use clickers for RATs and Application activities.

Our two choices are CPS and i-Clicker.  CPS allows students/groups to be working on different questions at the same time, while i-Clicker does not.  However, we have had many, Many, MANY stability/reliability problems with CPS, so we're going with i-Clicker.

Here's my plan:

(1)  In addition to each student having a clicker, each team will have one additional clicker that the teacher brings to and takes from class, distributed and collected on RAT days.

(2)  Students will be given the quiz form on paper, upon which they circle their individual answers.  The quiz will consist of 10 knowledge-level questions and 5 conceptual/analytical/application questions.

(3)  At the given time, the teacher will activate the i-Clicker receiver and the whole class will march through the quiz, keying in their individual answers one-at-a-time using their individual clickers.

(4)  Once that is complete, then the teams will convene and march through ONLY the five higher-level questions, using their team clicker.  They will have, say, five minutes to talk about question number 11, after which the teacher opens up the response system and they key in their answers to get immediate feedback.  Then they have five minutes to talk about question number 12, after which they teacher opens up the response system and they key in their answers to get immediate feedback.  Then question 13, and so on.

Obviously, this is not ideal, as it makes the team discussions a little herky-jerky.  But that is an inconvenience/awkwardness that will be predictable and shared by everyone, as opposed to the different handful of random folks every time who's clicker will not register, does not work, etc..  In a large, lower-division, REQUIRED class, we are going to have plenty on our plates to get students on board with TBL ("Navigating the bumpy road" and so on), and I am loathe to introduced the extra anxiety and frustration of a flaky clicker system into it.

Your thoughts?

-M


Michael Sweet, Ph.D.
Faculty Development Specialist
Division of Instructional Innovation and Assessment (DIIA)
University of Texas Austin
MAI 2206 * (512) 232-1775
 
"Teaching is the profession that makes all other professions possible." - Todd Witaker

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