Writing Great Clicker Questions: The Gentle Art of Questioning

Writing Great Clicker Questions: The Gentle Art of Questioning
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Learn how to write effective clicker questions to engage students in peer instruction. This workshop by Dr. Stephanie Chasteen of the University of Colorado at Boulder covers the basics of questioning, clickers and peer instruction, overcoming challenges, and creating an action plan. Handouts are available on the STEMclickers website, and Dr. Chasteen also blogs about science education at sciencegeekgirl.com.

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About Writing Great Clicker Questions: The Gentle Art of Questioning

PowerPoint presentation about 'Writing Great Clicker Questions: The Gentle Art of Questioning'. This presentation describes the topic on Learn how to write effective clicker questions to engage students in peer instruction. This workshop by Dr. Stephanie Chasteen of the University of Colorado at Boulder covers the basics of questioning, clickers and peer instruction, overcoming challenges, and creating an action plan. Handouts are available on the STEMclickers website, and Dr. Chasteen also blogs about science education at sciencegeekgirl.com.. The key topics included in this slideshow are clicker questions, peer instruction, STEM education, effective questioning, action plan,. Download this presentation absolutely free.

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1. WRITING GREAT CLICKER QUESTIONS The Gentle Art of Questioning Dr. Stephanie V. Chasteen Physics Department & Science Education Initiative Univ. of Colorado at Boulder http://STEMclickers.colorado.edu Web and blog: http://blog.sciencegeekgirl.com ( will have handouts ) Email : stephanie.chasteen@colorado.edu Workshop developed using materials from SEI and Rosie Piller Agenda: 1. Thinking about questioning 2. About clickers and peer instruction 3. Writing great clicker questions 4. Overcoming common challenges 5. Action plan Agenda: 1. Thinking about questioning 2. About clickers and peer instruction 3. Writing great clicker questions 4. Overcoming common challenges 5. Action plan

2. Exercise #1 : Why question? 2 1. Why do we question our students? 2. When might you use questioning in your classes? 3. For what purposes might clickers be an appropriate questioning tool?

3. Question Cycle: Before / During / After Credit: Rosie Piller and Ian Beatty. 3 BEFORE Setting up instruction Motivate Discover Predict outcome Provoke thinking Assess prior knowledge DURING Developing knowledge Check knowledge Application Analysis Evaluation Synthesis Exercise skill Elicit misconception AFTER Assessing learning Relate to big picture Demonstrate success Review or recap Exit poll

4. When to ask questions 1: Before & After 4 Before Instruction Motivate students Why is it important to? What might we want to? What kinds of things can go wrong? Help them discover information What do we have to take into account when we? What needs to happen when you? Predict and show: We have seen that X happens when we do Y. What do you think will happen when? Assess prior knowledge or provoke thinking/discussion What do you think about? Would you/do you? What do you think will happen if? After Instruction Have students recap what they have learned What steps did you go through to solve the problem? What are the most important things to remember? Exit poll: What did we learn today? Ask them to relate information to the big picture How does this lead into the next topic? Demonstrate success and limits of understanding Ask questions that students have built an understanding of during the class. Ask questions that go beyond what was done in class See also the Blooms Taxonomy handout for question stems

5. When to ask questions 2: During 5 Test knowledge of facts What are the three types of? Can you define? Test comprehension of concepts Which statements support? What examples can you think of? Test applications of concepts What would happen if? Which of the following are X? Help them analyze what they are learning Based on the symptoms, what would you say is going on? What is the relationship between? Test their ability to evaluate Here are two solutions. Which is more appropriate and why? Which of these is more important? Provoke them to synthesize their understanding. How would you test? Propose a way to Elicit a misconception Ask questions where a common student misconception will result in a particular response Exercise a skill How would you? What is the next step in this problem? See also the Blooms Taxonomy handout for question stems

6. What is special about clicker questions? Similar in terms of goals Multiple choice Anonymous (to peers) Every student has a voice the loud ones and the shy ones Forced wait time You can withhold the answer until everyone has had time to think (choose when to show the histogram) 6 * From other types of in-class questions What does this tool help us to do?

7. 7 Ask Question Peer Discussion Vote Class Discussion Lecture (Maybe vote) * See also: Peer Instruction, A Users Manual. E. Mazur. Anatomy of Peer Instruction

8. Peer instruction helps students learn Research shows that: Students can better answer a similar question after talking to their peers Peer discussion + instructor explanation of question works better than either one alone Students like peer instruction Peer instruction classes outperform traditional lectures on a common test 8 See http://STEMclickers.colorado.edu for various references

9. Exercise #2 : Core Philosophies In groups of 3-5, brainstorm your answers to the question, What are the underlying principles that make this work?. Why might this be an effective teaching strategy? What must the instructor believe in order to embrace this strategy? What must the students believe in order to play the game effectively? 9

10. Challenges: The toughest thing about using clickers What are some of the key challenges and solutions that were discussed?

11. 11 11 1. Ask Question What are some challenges/ philosophies / solutions related to asking the question? Handout/worksheet / whiteboard Best practices Ask several times during lecture Ask challenging, meaningful questions Dont post until ready & give time to read Best practices Ask several times during lecture Ask challenging, meaningful questions Dont post until ready & give time to read Philosophies Questions are integral to lecture Students can learn by considering a question Philosophies Questions are integral to lecture Students can learn by considering a question

12. Tips for writing clicker questions* 12 Dont make them too easy . You can ask multiple choice questions at higher levels of Blooms! Dont just test memorized facts. Use questions that will prompt discussion. Interesting questions that students cant answer on their own are more likely to spur productive discussion. Use questions that emphasize reasoning or process over the right answer. Students need to be convinced that understanding strategies will get them a good grade. Use clear wording so that students understand what they are being asked. Keep revising. Write tempting distractors using your knowledge of student difficulties . For example, look at student answers on exams or quizzes, or first give the question as an open-ended question to generate common wrong answers. Consider creative questions. You can survey your students, ask them how well they understand, break problems into parts, or use pictures or graphs in the answer choices. Good sources of questions: Questions your students ask you or that you overhear Common analogies you use as a teacher A series of connected questions to lead students through reasoning Interpret graphs, data, pictures, etc. Discussion questions where there is no one right answer *particularly for use with peer instruction See also Tips for successful clicker use handout

13. Other tips on question writing 13 Jot down any ideas you got from discussion, or the gallery walk, here.

14. Exercise #3: Question goals What is the instructional goal of this question? Can you improve this question at all? 14 A. The change in the earths distance from the sun during the year B. The tilt of the earths axis C. Changes in the suns brightness D. Changes in clouds E. None of the above What causes the seasons?

15. 2 Blooms Taxonomy Verbs (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)

16. Exercise #4: Blooms level What is the Blooms level, roughly, of this question? Can you Bloomify up the level of this question, using the Blooms verb sheets? 16 A. The change in the earths distance from the sun during the year B. The tilt of the earths axis C. Changes in the suns brightness D. Changes in clouds E. None of the above What causes the seasons?

17. 2. Peer Discussion: Challenges 17 Philosophies: Students learn through discussion Students need to know that you value their ideas & that its safe to share Philosophies: Students learn through discussion Students need to know that you value their ideas & that its safe to share Solutions: Make it clear why youre doing this Circulate and ask questions / model Use questions they want to discuss Allow enough time (2-5 mins) Focus on reasoning in wrap-up Solutions: Make it clear why youre doing this Circulate and ask questions / model Use questions they want to discuss Allow enough time (2-5 mins) Focus on reasoning in wrap-up

18. 3. Wrap-Up Discussion . Challenges? 18 Solutions: Establish culture of respect Consider whether to show the histogram immediately Ask multiple students to defend their answers Emphasize reasoning: Why are wrong answers wrong and why right answer is right Solutions: Establish culture of respect Consider whether to show the histogram immediately Ask multiple students to defend their answers Emphasize reasoning: Why are wrong answers wrong and why right answer is right Philosophies: Student ideas are important Students need to feel safe Philosophies: Student ideas are important Students need to feel safe

19. Actio n Plan 19 What will you do to implement ideas you heard about in this workshop? OR what key ideas will you share with a colleague? (See Clicker Tips sheet for summary!) 1. 2. 3. 19

20. References & Resources Clicker Resource Page from the Science Education Initiative: http:// STEMclickers.colorado.edu. Has clicker question banks (in the sciences), an instructors guide, and videos of classroom use. Useful books (such as Eric Mazurs Peer Instruction are cited there. Workshop handouts will be at http://blog.sciencegeekgirl.com Many materials in this workshop (particularly the questioning cycle and the participant exercises) were adapted from Rosie Piller , Making Students Think: The Art of Questioning. Short papers published in: Computer Training & Support Conference, 1995; ISPI International Conferences, 1991 and 1996; ASTD National Conference on Technical & Skills Training, 1990. Related workshop description at http://www.educationexperts.net/mstworkshop.html. Other materials (particularly sample clicker questions and goals of clicker questions) adapted from Ian Beattys Technology Enhanced Formative Assessment (TEFA) program. http://ianbeatty.com/crs http://STEMclickers.colorado.edu stephanie.chasteen@colorado.edu http://STEMclickers.colorado.edu stephanie.chasteen@colorado.edu Blog : http://blog.sciencegeekgirl.com Will have handouts and PPT Blog : http://blog.sciencegeekgirl.com Will have handouts and PPT Thanks! Thanks!