Title of article
Does Displaying the Class Results Affect Student Discussion during Peer Instruction?
Author/Authors
Kathryn E. Perez، نويسنده , , Eric A. Strauss، نويسنده , , Nicholas Downey، نويسنده , , Anne Galbraith، نويسنده , , Robert Jeanne، نويسنده , , Scott Cooper، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
8
From page
133
To page
140
Abstract
The use of personal response systems, or clickers, is increasingly common in college classrooms. Although clickers can increase student engagement and discussion, their benefits also can be overstated. A common practice is to ask the class a question, display the responses, allow the students to discuss the question, and then collect the responses a second time. In an introductory biology course, we asked whether showing students the class responses to a question biased their second response. Some sections of the course displayed a bar graph of the student responses and others served as a control group in which discussion occurred without seeing the most common answer chosen by the class. If students saw the bar graph, they were 30% more likely to switch from a less common to the most common response. This trend was more pronounced in true/false questions (38%) than multiple-choice questions (28%). These results suggest that observing the most common response can bias a student’s second vote on a question and may be misinterpreted as an increase in performance due to student discussion alone.
Journal title
CBE—Life Sciences Education
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
CBE—Life Sciences Education
Record number
656653
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