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Credit should be given to: Stephanie Chasteen and the Science Education Initiative at the University of Colorado, http://colorado.edu/sei
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Introduce yourself to your neighbor
• Discussion point: What are some features of effective multiple-choice questions?
Part 3. Writing Great Clicker Questions
Dr. Stefanie Mollborn
Sociology and Institute of Behavioral Science
University of Colorado Boulder
Adapted from slides by:
Dr. Stephanie V. Chasteen
Physics Department & Science Ed. Initiative
University of Colorado – Boulder
Creative Commons – Attribution. Please attribute Stephanie Chasteen / Scince Education Initiative/ CU-Boulder
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Challenges: QuestionsBest practices•Ask several times during lecture•Ask challenging, meaningful questions•What does this mean for non-STEM fields?
Various question types
1. Conceptual “one right answer” questions
2. Discussion “no one right answer” questions
3. Predict an outcome (e.g., of an experiment)
4. Survey questions / personal opinion / past experiences
5. Embed reasoning in answers (“Slower, because gravity is acting against it.” “Slower, because it loses energy to friction.”)
6. Use images as part of question or as answer choicesSee TEFA handout
Activity 2: Gallery Walk
Visit as many questions as you can. For each question:
• Try to think beyond the question content.
• What are some useful features of this question?
• What does and doesn’t work well about this question?
15 minutes
Aihofanz2010 on Wikimedia
Question-writing tips
• Don’t just use simple quiz questions; use questions at a variety of difficulty levels
• Use challenging questions that prompt discussion and emphasize reasoning
• Use tempting distracters (for ‘right answer’ questions)
• Think outside the box! Use a variety of question strategies and use questions at a variety of points in lecture.
See handout
Tips for ‘no right answer’ questions
• Mutually exclusive and exhaustive categories!
• Consider a wide variety of possible answers
• Catch-all “other” category for many question types
• Avoiding unclear or double-barreled questions
• Read question and answers out loud to yourself
Question Cycle: Before, During, and After Lecture9
Credit: Rosie Piller and Ian Beatty.
BEFORESetting up instruction
MotivateDiscoverPredict outcomeProvoke thinkingAssess prior knowledge
DURINGDeveloping knowledge
Check knowledgeApplicationAnalysisEvaluationSynthesisExercise skillElicit misconception
AFTER Assessing learning
Relate to big pictureDemonstrate successReview or recapExit poll Look at handout
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What makes a good clicker question?
clarity Students should waste no effort trying to figure out what’s being asked.
context Is this topic currently being covered in class?
connection to learning goals
Does the question make students do the right thing to demonstrate they grasp the concept.
distractors What do the “wrong” answers tell you about students’ thinking?
difficulty Is the question too trivial? too hard?stimulates thoughtful discussion
Will the question engage the students and spark thoughtful discussions?Is there potential for you to be “agile”?
Use questions at a variety of cognitive depths
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Do the questions you use intellectually
challenge your students or simply assess their factual knowledge?
handout
A tool to investigate this: Bloom’s Taxonomy of the Cognitive Domain
Bloom’s Taxonomy
See handout with verbs
Activity 3: Write a Question
13Credit: Rosie Piller and Ian Beatty.
BEFORESetting up instruction
MotivateDiscoverPredict outcomeProvoke thinkingAssess prior knowledge
DURINGDeveloping knowledge
Check knowledgeApplicationAnalysisEvaluationSynthesisExercise skillElicit misconception
AFTER Assessing learning
Relate to big pictureDemonstrate successReview or recapExit poll
Write a draft question that accomplishes one of these goals
10 minutes
Handout
But…
The perfect question doesn’t solve all problems!
Action Plan
• Take a few minutes to write down your action plan to implement ideas you heard about in this part of the workshop.
• Email it to yourself!
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Thank you!
If you are staying for the Advanced Workshop, stay here.
Feel free to contact us with any questions!
If there is an evaluation, we should mention it here.