Clickers in the Classroom

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active learning
active learning techniques
Category=JNM
Category=JNT
Classroom Clickers
Classroom Response
classroom response systems
Classroom Voting
Clicker Activities
Clicker Questions
Clicker Technology
College Learning Centers
Disengaged
educational technology integration
enhanced collaboration
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
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Executive Attention
Face To Face
Follow
formative assessment strategies
Growth Mindset
Handheld
Held
higher education pedagogy
individual response systems
interactive teaching methods for faculty
neuroscience of learning
Peer Instruction
Research Methods Pedagogy
Social Science Classroom
Social Science Research
Stem Classroom
Stem Course
Stem Faculty
Stem Instructor
student engagement
student engagement tools
student response systems
teaching and learning
transitional educational technology
Vanden Heuvel

Product details

  • ISBN 9781620362808
  • Weight: 240g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Nov 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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With classroom response systems (or CRSs, also known as Student Response Systems, Individual Response Systems, or, informally, “clickers”) in use in higher education for some 20 years, there is now both ample research and a wealth of examples and ideas to draw on for faculty who are contemplating their use, or exploring new ways to integrate them in their teaching.The research demonstrates that, integrated purposefully in courses, the use of clickers aligns with what neuroscience tells us about the formation of memory and the development of learning. In addition, they elicit contributions from otherwise reticent students and enhance collaboration, even in large lecture courses; foster more honest responses to discussion prompts; increase students’ engagement and satisfaction with the classroom environment; and provide an instantaneous method of formative assessment.This book presents a brief history of the development of CRSs and a survey of empirical research to provide a context for current best practices, and then presents seven chapters providing authentic, effective examples of the use of clickers across a wide range of academic disciplines, demonstrating how they can be effective in helping students to recognize their misconceptions and grasp fundamental concepts.Like all pedagogical interventions, classroom response systems are no panacea, and the experienced contributors candidly describe avoidable pitfalls while demonstrating how clickers can deepen student learning and how, by providing instantaneous feedback, they enable teachers to make adjustments on the fly to better address student understandings or misunderstandings.The final chapter explores pros and cons of response systems that use mobile devices and smart phones, and the book concludes with an annotated list of further resources, such as books, articles, and videos.

David S. Goldstein is Director of the Teaching and Learning Center and Senior Lecturer in the School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at the University of Washington, Bothell. Peter D. Wallis is Instructional Technologist of Information Technologies at the University of Washington, Seattle. James Rhem