My Digital Classroom

June 11, 2008

Activotes in my class

Filed under: IWB stuff — Mark Pilson @ 10:19 pm and tagged , , , , , ,

I’m sure anyone who has used the Activotes, or any other ’student response system’ can testify, the students absolutely love them. They are a great way to get kids excited about doing a quiz and revising for a test, whilst also giving teachers an idea about the areas they need to go over with certain students.

While we have a lot of IWBs at school, we have one class set of Activotes that reside in the Resource Centre (and are loaned out to teachers). Therefore, I am not someone who is going to get them out for a lesson just so I can do an ad hoc question about the students opinion on a certain topic. That’s what classroom discussion is for. So here’s how I generally use the Activotes:

At the conclusion of a unit in SOSE (History/Geography/Economics), I give the students a quiz using the activotes which I use as part of my formative assessment. I can then see the areas which I need to revisit with different members of the class. Ok, nothing new and I’m sure it’s how they get used most of the time. Incidentally, I don’t like to use them for summative assessment, as there is only so much information you can gain about a student’s understanding from a multiple choice test. What I create out of this quiz instead is a revision sheet that contains the questions from the revision test and whether or not the students got these answers correct.

Revision sheet

At the end of the quiz, I export the results to an Excel file and set up a new sheet with IF statements that will put in “correct” or “incorrect” into each cell, depending on the student’s answer for that question.

I then mail-merge the Excel file with a Word document that has all the questions on it, along with the student name and their result in the revision test. The students are then given this as their revision sheet for the unit test. For those students who perform below par on the revision test, I also give them a more structured sheet to aid in their revision.

June 6, 2008

Thinking Hats & IWBs

Filed under: Teaching Reflections — Mark Pilson @ 11:20 pm and tagged , , , , , , ,

Today we had all six classes of year 8 English (two classes working together each time) complete an activity based on de Bono’s 6 Thinking Hats. We are studying A Bridge To Wiseman’s Cove (an excellent book by James Moloney) and to break things up a bit, we opened up the dividing wall between the two classes, divided the two classes into 10 smaller groups, with each group looking at a particular character. The groups then had to look at their character through the lens of the red hat (emotions), green hat (ideas – predictions), white hat (facts), Black hat (criticisms), Yellow hat (positives) and blue hat (summary of other hats). At the end of the session, each group had to present their findings to the wider group.

Intro Page

The activity seemed to work really well, with students finding evidence to support each of their points, and it was really interesting to see them having to look for the positives in undesirable characters.

The IWB file made it really easy to keep track of the time allocated for each hat, and gave the students a visual cue as to what they needed to be focused on during that time period.

Red Hat

I did receive the comment at the end of the day by another teacher who wasn’t 100% sure about what they gained from the lesson, as much of the information presented by her students had already been covered when they constructed individual mind maps for each of the characters earlier in the novel study. I’m sure this is true to a certain extent, however, I think that they were also picking up new things and were forced to think deeper than they had previously done about their character. In addition to this, it will also have reinforced and built upon the work that was done earlier in the novel.

I do think highly of this teacher and think that we have to look critically at our lessons, making sure that we review what student learning took place.

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