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An Updated Show of Hands

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An Updated Show of Hands. / Barnett, Helen; Karapiperi, Anna; Kastis, Eleftherios.
In: MSOR Connections, Vol. 21, No. 1, 06.03.2023, p. 18-22.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Barnett H, Karapiperi A, Kastis E. An Updated Show of Hands. MSOR Connections. 2023 Mar 6;21(1):18-22. doi: 10.21100/msor.v21i1.1375

Author

Barnett, Helen ; Karapiperi, Anna ; Kastis, Eleftherios. / An Updated Show of Hands. In: MSOR Connections. 2023 ; Vol. 21, No. 1. pp. 18-22.

Bibtex

@article{86ed58e2eef04c45b9d16d28f26d0f13,
title = "An Updated Show of Hands",
abstract = "It is a tried and tested technique to gauge the overall understanding of a class: a multiple-choice quiz with a show of hands for who thinks the answer is a, b or c. Although quick and easy, how much does it really measure the students{\textquoteright} understanding? On top of that, how useful is it as an informal formative assessment? A few students usually dominate the class and less confident students may not put up their hand, or may follow what their classmates are doing, and hence both the learner and educator may never know the individuals{\textquoteright} true answer.Here we discuss “an updated show of hands”, whereby students scan a QR code to take them to a real-time quiz hosted on the Moodle Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), that they can answer on their smart device. All students answer the same question at the same time, and after a set time, the correct answer is revealed and the class results for that question are then displayed to everyone as an anonymous percentage. Whilst this updated method has the obvious advantage of anonymity and the obvious disadvantage of potential technical problems, in this case study we provide a full description of the implementation and an in-depth discussion on the pedagogy and practicalities of the updated show of hands – the real-time smart device quiz.",
keywords = "mathematics education, maths support",
author = "Helen Barnett and Anna Karapiperi and Eleftherios Kastis",
note = "Please note that Helen Barnett published this paper under the name Helen Berrington.",
year = "2023",
month = mar,
day = "6",
doi = "10.21100/msor.v21i1.1375",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "18--22",
journal = "MSOR Connections",
issn = "1473-4869",
publisher = "sigma network",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - An Updated Show of Hands

AU - Barnett, Helen

AU - Karapiperi, Anna

AU - Kastis, Eleftherios

N1 - Please note that Helen Barnett published this paper under the name Helen Berrington.

PY - 2023/3/6

Y1 - 2023/3/6

N2 - It is a tried and tested technique to gauge the overall understanding of a class: a multiple-choice quiz with a show of hands for who thinks the answer is a, b or c. Although quick and easy, how much does it really measure the students’ understanding? On top of that, how useful is it as an informal formative assessment? A few students usually dominate the class and less confident students may not put up their hand, or may follow what their classmates are doing, and hence both the learner and educator may never know the individuals’ true answer.Here we discuss “an updated show of hands”, whereby students scan a QR code to take them to a real-time quiz hosted on the Moodle Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), that they can answer on their smart device. All students answer the same question at the same time, and after a set time, the correct answer is revealed and the class results for that question are then displayed to everyone as an anonymous percentage. Whilst this updated method has the obvious advantage of anonymity and the obvious disadvantage of potential technical problems, in this case study we provide a full description of the implementation and an in-depth discussion on the pedagogy and practicalities of the updated show of hands – the real-time smart device quiz.

AB - It is a tried and tested technique to gauge the overall understanding of a class: a multiple-choice quiz with a show of hands for who thinks the answer is a, b or c. Although quick and easy, how much does it really measure the students’ understanding? On top of that, how useful is it as an informal formative assessment? A few students usually dominate the class and less confident students may not put up their hand, or may follow what their classmates are doing, and hence both the learner and educator may never know the individuals’ true answer.Here we discuss “an updated show of hands”, whereby students scan a QR code to take them to a real-time quiz hosted on the Moodle Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), that they can answer on their smart device. All students answer the same question at the same time, and after a set time, the correct answer is revealed and the class results for that question are then displayed to everyone as an anonymous percentage. Whilst this updated method has the obvious advantage of anonymity and the obvious disadvantage of potential technical problems, in this case study we provide a full description of the implementation and an in-depth discussion on the pedagogy and practicalities of the updated show of hands – the real-time smart device quiz.

KW - mathematics education

KW - maths support

U2 - 10.21100/msor.v21i1.1375

DO - 10.21100/msor.v21i1.1375

M3 - Journal article

VL - 21

SP - 18

EP - 22

JO - MSOR Connections

JF - MSOR Connections

SN - 1473-4869

IS - 1

ER -