Clickers and classroom engagement : the impact of audience response systems on student attentiveness and engagement

Student engagement is a critical component of effective classroom instruction. Many socio-constructive pedagogies, including active learning and peer instruction, depend upon students not only paying attention to, but actively shaping, the learning environment. Student response devices, such as clic...

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Main Author: Crandall, Jason Robert
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-2849
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2011-05-28492015-09-20T17:01:52ZClickers and classroom engagement : the impact of audience response systems on student attentiveness and engagementCrandall, Jason RobertClickerClassroom response systemsEngagementAttentivenessDual-taskStudent engagement is a critical component of effective classroom instruction. Many socio-constructive pedagogies, including active learning and peer instruction, depend upon students not only paying attention to, but actively shaping, the learning environment. Student response devices, such as clickers, are thought to increase student engagement by providing students with regular opportunities to check their comprehension or express their opinions. Claims of increased student engagement due to clicker use are often based upon student self-reports and have only a small correlation with observed learning gains or other measures of attentiveness. This paper compared self-report data, pre- and post-test scores, and a direct test of attentiveness to investigate what effect clicker use has on student engagement. Analyses showed that subjects using clickers were significantly slower to respond to tests of attentiveness than subjects in other conditions. This suggests that using clickers affects what students are able or willing to attend to during a lecture.text2011-07-25T20:48:19Z2011-07-25T20:48:19Z2011-052011-07-25May 20112011-07-25T20:48:23Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-28492152/ETD-UT-2011-05-2849eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Clicker
Classroom response systems
Engagement
Attentiveness
Dual-task
spellingShingle Clicker
Classroom response systems
Engagement
Attentiveness
Dual-task
Crandall, Jason Robert
Clickers and classroom engagement : the impact of audience response systems on student attentiveness and engagement
description Student engagement is a critical component of effective classroom instruction. Many socio-constructive pedagogies, including active learning and peer instruction, depend upon students not only paying attention to, but actively shaping, the learning environment. Student response devices, such as clickers, are thought to increase student engagement by providing students with regular opportunities to check their comprehension or express their opinions. Claims of increased student engagement due to clicker use are often based upon student self-reports and have only a small correlation with observed learning gains or other measures of attentiveness. This paper compared self-report data, pre- and post-test scores, and a direct test of attentiveness to investigate what effect clicker use has on student engagement. Analyses showed that subjects using clickers were significantly slower to respond to tests of attentiveness than subjects in other conditions. This suggests that using clickers affects what students are able or willing to attend to during a lecture. === text
author Crandall, Jason Robert
author_facet Crandall, Jason Robert
author_sort Crandall, Jason Robert
title Clickers and classroom engagement : the impact of audience response systems on student attentiveness and engagement
title_short Clickers and classroom engagement : the impact of audience response systems on student attentiveness and engagement
title_full Clickers and classroom engagement : the impact of audience response systems on student attentiveness and engagement
title_fullStr Clickers and classroom engagement : the impact of audience response systems on student attentiveness and engagement
title_full_unstemmed Clickers and classroom engagement : the impact of audience response systems on student attentiveness and engagement
title_sort clickers and classroom engagement : the impact of audience response systems on student attentiveness and engagement
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-2849
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