LYNNE ADRIAN
A (8) | B (6) | C (5) | D (11) | E (4) | F (1) | G (8) | H (3) | I (1) | J (25) | K (8) | L (4) | M (12) | N (2) | P (10) | R (11) | S (10) | T (9) | V (4) |
Trace Evidence: How New Media Can Change What We Know About Student Learning
Posted January 18th, 2009 by Lynne Adrian, University of Alabama
0 Comments | 3721 Page Views
Clicker
technology, often used in large-enrollment science courses, works
well when every question has a single right answer. Lynne Adrian
wanted to find out whether clickers could be used in disciplines
which raise more questions than answers, and how illuminating the
gray areas between “right” and “wrong” could
help her students think critically about American studies. She found
that the technology allowed her to preserve traces of the otherwise
ephemeral class discussions, enabling her to analyze the types of
questions she was asking in class and to track their effects on
students’ written work throughout the semester.
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