Sunday, October 28, 2012

Technology/ Action Research

I would say I use technology at least once or twice a week in my classroom. For three days this week we used clickers! I really enjoy using clickers and I think the students also like them because they are a break from worksheets and they can instantly see if their answer is correct. In my class I usually introduce a lesson and do a couple of problems. Then I turn the students loose to practice. The next day I have a Smart Board presentation with several problems. Sometimes they are multiple choice questions, (i.e. angle relationships), or they could be solving for a missing angle (entering a number). The students answer the question and then we insert the pie chart of everyone’s answers on the Smart Board. The students get excited when their answer is correct. This gives them more confidence to explain how they worked the problem (I look at the expression on their face before I call on them). I’ve had some students even want to come to the board and work out the problem for the class. By using the clickers, I’ve experienced my students gain confidence and participating in class. They are taking a test on Tuesday and I can see how these grades correlate with doing problems on clickers. I have had some students want worksheets. They like to work more independently and have the problems in front of them.
 
My action research topic is my journey through standards based grading. This is the first time I have been in a school that uses standards based grading. Since students usually receive only one grade per standard this is usually a test grade. However, it could be a project. This brings about the question “what about homework/participation?” I plan to investigate whether standards based grading affects participation in class and completed in class work. There are some students who think because it isn’t a grade they don’t have to do work that day. The way students are motivated to do the work is so they can pass their test. If they choose not to participate in class work they will get a write up for insubordination (not following directions). This tactic has worked so far! I’m very interested in the articles about standards based grading. I hope on finding out what strategies make standards based grading work effectively. As far as data I’m collecting, I’m not quite sure. I can use a journal/blog about my experiences. I could also survey students about participation/tests related to standards based grading.

7 comments:

  1. Clickers sound like a great tool. I used them in college and thought they were awful as a student but I am glad your students enjoy them.

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  2. I think it's so cool that you can get that immediate feedback and so can your students. I didn't like it in college but I think it was directly correlated with the fact that I never remembered to bring mine to class.

    I'm also really excited to hear about standards based grading!

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  3. I really like clickers. It is a great way for you to quickly get formative assessment without your students having to get out of their seats and without you having to check 30 papers.

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  4. I love when my students become so confident that they want to come to the board. I've had students volunteer without me even asking them.

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    1. That means the CR environment is comfortable and supportive - students can take a chance and it is okay if they make a mistake.

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  5. Relevant AR topic - you can also track students' participation in class...maybe high, low, adequate and then note anything that really struck you about students' participation for a given day. HW would be easier to track.

    I think it is very useful to have open-ended type questions so that you can share students' comments in their own words (and writing).

    Maybe a ticket out the door for this.

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  6. We use clickers, but not often enough! I like them! Lately, they my students have been racing to see who gets the answer in first.

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