Showing posts with label feedback. Show all posts
Showing posts with label feedback. Show all posts

Friday, 28 November 2014

Socrative



This was originally written for teachers at my school and shared with them November 28.

We had a student stop by 125 and ask what the name of the site with the little rocket ships for answering questions that Mrs. Le used in history.  He wanted to use it in his math class. I think it’s great that the student was able to see the flexibility of the resource and that it could be used in other classes.  I thought I’d share it with everyone in case you are looking for something different to do as we head into December.


logo.pngThe answer is socrative.com  Socrative is basically a clicker type app/website that collects students responses in a variety of ways. You do not need to book chromebooks because it works just as well on any devices the students have - it is very mobile friendly.

Here’s a video that briefly describes what socrative does.

socrative options.png


Socrative.com is an easy on line tool that you can use in your classroom with students for quick check-ins, quizes, exit tickets or what socrative calls space races (the one with the rocket ship).  


Reports are collected and can be emailed to you.  Quizzes can be done either teacher paced or student paced.  In “Quick Question” you can poll the class and find out where the class stands on an issue, or with their understanding of a concept.  I haven’t used Exit Ticket at all, so I can’t speak to that one.

space race.pngI’ve been using the space race in my classes.  I create a quiz (in manage quizzes) before class based on work students had been doing.  In class I login to socrative, click space race, choose my quiz and the number of teams I want to have.  I then break students up into teams and have them compete against each other to answer the questions.  They login using my class room number (assigned by socrative).  One device per team.  As they answer questions correctly, their rocket moves across the screen (I put it up on the data projector).  They enjoy the competition and get pretty excited.


I’ve also done this with new material.  Students are expected to research the answers while they do the race.  This works best if teams can have 2 devices - one for research and one for the race, but it can be done in different tabs on one device.
Socrative allows for multiple choice, true/false or short answer type questions.  The short answer can get a bit tricky because the student answer has to match yours exactly (capitals, spelling).  I try to avoid this type of question.

If you want help getting started with socrative let me know.  It’s not difficult to pick up, but it is easier if you play around with it the first time using more than one device - one as teacher, one as student.

Saturday, 8 November 2014

Read&Write for Google part one.

The following was first written for my school's staff newsletter (Bear Essentials) May 30, 2014. Bracketed and italics have been added after publication in Bear Essentials.


Have you enabled Texthelp in your ugcloud account?  If you have, you see a gold and green pull down tab at the top of your documents.  Or maybe it is already pulled down and covering your document title - you can click the little up arrows and make it almost disappear.  But don’t do that, because I want to talk to you about how useful it can be.

(If you are not part of UGDSB, Texthelp, also known as Read&Write for Google is a Google app you can add to your account through the chrome store.)


If you are familiar with it, chances are you are in special ed and are using it as a text reader with some of our students.  It is a replacement for kurzweil in some cases.  It works for text documents, webpages and .pdfs if they are opened through Drive.


But it can do so much more.  There are 4 highlighters that you can use, much faster and simpler than using the highlight tool in the menu bar across the top of your document page.  There is also a button that will collect your highlights and collate them in another document.  There are a number of reasons both teachers and students might find this useful. The following ideas come from Rebecca Grimes (@glblcanuck), a fellow teacher in UGDSB.  


Ideas for Teacher Use in the Classroom
  • Teachers could use the highlight tool to provide visual feedback --> provide students with a legend of what the colours mean, then just highlight the common errors without having to write the same comment over and over again (ie: verb tense = pink, sentence structure = yellow, missing citation = green)  If you make the legend consistent in your class or department it will be easy for you and your students.
  • You could then use the "Collect" option to create a list of sample errors you could use with the class quickly and easily.
Ideas for Student Use in the Classroom:
  • In Language classes, students could use the different colour to identify required language components in assignments.
  • Students could use a colour to identify the facts that they've included in their assignment.
  • Similarly, based on the business department’s self-evalution, they could use the different colours to demonstrate where they’ve met the requirement for the assignment.
  • In English, students could identify quotations used in their essays.  (Use a different colour for each book if doing a comparative essay or, one colour for quotations from the novel and another colour for quotations from secondary sources.)
  • Students could use the "Collect Highlights" feature to collate the highlighted information into an overview document that they could then share with their teacher.  
  • For study purposes in any subject, students could highlight their notes and then export their highlights to create a page of key facts / ideas / etc to study.
Rebecca’s original blog post can be found at http://mllegrimes.blogspot.ca/2014/04/improving-feedback-and-student-self.html

Monday, 17 June 2013

GAFE and feedback


The following post was written for Bear Essentials (my school’s staff weekly newsletter).  I have a regular column “On-line with Lisa.” This was a guest post written by David Harvey, and English teacher at ODSS. This post was originally written for the newsletter the week of April 12, 2013.


I am a better teacher this semester than every semester before it.  This is not hyperbole, but a direct result of using ugcloud.  ugcloud is a board-supported cloud-based (no hard drive required) service where I create documents in an excellent, auto-saving word processor (google drive), share documents with students and colleagues, and where I receive and provide feedback on all of my students’ work through our ugcloud email addresses.  When I’m working with student writing, ugcloud becomes interactive and allows me to highlight everything from specific words to particular punctuation to entire paragraphs and make corresponding comments in the side margin.  The student sees both the highlights and the comments.  When the student clicks on either the highlighted section or the comment in the margin,  the corresponding information is highlighted.  There is a very concrete and clear link between their writing and my comments.  ugcloud also allows me to make an overall comment on a piece of writing which I often do when I’m done reading it.  

My teaching has become accelerated through ugcloud as it has allowed me to give students more precise, concrete, full-sentence feedback by the mid-term than I can usually manage in an entire semester.  The interim report, which often causes me great concern due to a lack of information, caused me no stress whatsoever this year, as at that point, I’d read and thoroughly commented on 6 pieces of formative writing in my 1D class and 9 in my 4U class.  The cloud makes things more efficient and effective, and while part of this is my ability to type faster than I write, another part of this is the closing of the feedback loop.  

We know that the shorter the time is between the work and the feedback the more likely the learning and, with the cloud, students no longer have to be in class (or even in the same country) to receive feedback, nor do they have to wait for me to mark 30 pieces of work before they get theirs back.  I mark them in the order in which they’re submitted and they can watch me work with their document in real-time.  As a result of the speed of things, I have never had a clearer understanding of my students’ abilities, nor taught them each so much on such an individual basis so early in a course.  I can open up their email folders and instantly see everything they’ve written, the order in which they submitted it, all of my feedback, and then each keystroke of editing the student has made while applying their new understanding.  

This is a game-changer.  While I’ve never accepted technology as the great saviour of education - and still don’t - I’ve never discovered and used a technology with such great benefits to both myself and my students.  I haven’t collected a single piece of paper from either class this semester - not one.  More importantly,  I’ve seen a level of improvement  in their work by midterm that I usually hope to see by the end of a course.  

I’ve witnessed what I consider three legitimate educational revolutions in my 14 year career, and this is the most recent and the most powerful one in terms of what works best for me and what works best for students.