Title: High Tech Questions, Low Tech Answers
1High Tech Questions, Low Tech Answers
- Maggie Austen
- Department of Chemistry
- TEL York, April 26, 2006
2High Tech Questions, Low Tech Answers
- Abstract
- Following (loosely) the lead of Harvard physicist
Eric Mazur, freshman chemistry lectures are
interspersed with multiple choice concept
questions allowing students to check their
understanding. - Our feedback mechanism is easy to implement and
almost as informative. (Instructions follow.)
Suggestions will be made for further
improvements. - More open ended concept questions are posted on
WebCT before each quiz to guide students in their
studying. Student response has been very positive
to both initiatives. (Not discussed in session.)
3Making a low-tech classroom response system
- Start with construction paper in three colours.
- I used 12 9 paper in red, yellow and green.
- Single colour packs of 24 sheets cost less than
2 each - Before the first class, cut paper to rectangles
in an appropriate size for your classroom needs. - I used 6 3, for a 200 seat lecture hall.
- It is not easy to read the names at the back of
the room, but larger would become quite
cumbersome to keep on the desk. - Assemble other materials to take to class
- Doutang-type fasteners (2 per student)
- Several rolls of transparent tape
- Several (2- or 3-) hole punchers
- Markers (black / blue), thickness depending on
size of classroom.
4Assembling the clickers 1
- Have students tape together three different
colours of paper, such that they can be easily
folded along the tape line, but will remain
sturdy all term. - Students use markers to write their name (what
they wish to be called) on each colour. - Students then continue with assembly
NAME
tape
NAME
tape
NAME
5Assembling the clickers 2
- Fold over the sheet so that the top and bottom
edges align. (Do not crease.) - Punch (2) holes in the edges, which will be used
both for fastening, and for storing the clicker
in a binder with the students notes. (3-hole
punch will give the correct spacing).
6Assembling the clickers 3
- Fasten with duotangs, to give a triangular prism.
- This will be a bit pinched at the fastened edge.
- Ask a question
- Clearly assign one colour per answer option.
- Students answer by facing the appropriate colour
towards you. - This may be built into your lecture notes, as
follows
NAME
7First thoughts
- Students learn best when they ____ about the
topic. - ? read
- ? hear
- ? talk
How can we help them do this? When there are 500
in a class?
8The class
- CHEM 1001, Section P, Winter Term
- CHEM 1000 is not a prerequisite should be.
- About 100 students
- Tuesday tutorial / quiz 6 7 pm
- Tuesday lectures 7 10 pm
- After the final exam I posted an anonymous survey
about the teaching tools I used. The last
question was open ended for comments.
9Franks Comments
- Dear Maggie, I think the concept questions have
succeeded in stimulating students to actively
digest and critically review the course
materials. And in most cases, the level of
challenge in these questions is just enough to
effectively create an ample environment for
students to engage in academic debate at the
first year level. - Also, the unique idea that multiple choice
questions are to be answered in class using
colour-coded cards (instead of electronic
clickers) makes interactions between the lecturer
and the audience more personal and visually
appealing. - It has succeeded not only in making learning a
more spontaneous process by seizing students'
attention, but also in pinpointing and clarifying
the focal and doubtful points. - These innovations, along with your conscientious
input, have worked together to greatly enhance
the accessibility and applicability of some
potentially dry concepts. Thank you for making
the overall learning experience a very pleasant
one and rekindling my spark for chemistry.
Sincerely yours, Frank
10Monikas Comments
- 1. Tricolor flashing cards great idea. It helps
to focus the students during the lecture. May I
suggest 2 things that may improve this system? - One thing is stressing in the first lecture how
difficult this course is and how it requires to
study before each lecture just as before each
lab. - This may help to ease in the flashing cards the
first reaction to them is are we in
kindergarten or what?. - Second thing - cutting down on chatter during the
lecture. It is very counterproductive for the
ones who try to follow the flashing cards
are very helpful to curb some of that but they
dont do the job entirely.
11First impressions of the coloured cards
- For each statement please indicate whether you
? agree ? are undecided ? disagree - This is silly.
- This could be fun.
- This is a unique idea.
- This could be helpful in my classes.
12Students impressions (as reported on the
end-of-term survey)
- In my lecture notes I often included little
multiple choice questions, to be answered using
the coloured cards we made in the first class. - What did you think of this idea? Choose all that
apply. (26 respondents) - a. I thought it was a silly idea. 2
- b. I thought it was a fun idea. 14
- c. I thought it was a unique idea. 17
- d. I thought it was a helpful idea. 18
- I never thought about it at all. 0
- (1 chose a only, 1 chose a/b/c/d)
13In my lecture notes I often included little
multiple choice questions, to be answered using
the coloured cards we made in the first class.
- How useful, for paying attention and
understanding during class, did you find them to
be? - How useful, for preparing to write quizzes and
exams, did you find them to be? - a. Very useful 11 5
- b. Somewhat useful 14 11
- c. Not very useful 1 8
- d. Very useless 0 2
- e. I never looked at them 0 0
- What did the students find the in-class questions
more useful for? - paying attention in class ? test preparation
- ? equally useful for both ?
14A student repeating the course said
- In regards to Maggie's actual teaching style, I
would pretty much stick to how things are
currently because they were a significant
improvement. ... - However, for the multiple choice questions, I may
include slides which explain how one got those
answers, because sometimes on going back and
reviewing, it was difficult, if not impossible,
to work through them again to get the same answer
or to apply it to similar answers. - Would you include answers in your posted notes?
- Yes / No / ?Sometimes? Discuss with your
neighbour!
15Other uses for the coloured cards
- Polling about anything where you just want a
general impression, not precision. - Gauging the students level of comfort with the
material - Should I move on / go faster, or do we need to
spend more time on this? - Hence the traffic light colour scheme Go /
/ Stop - This could be on a continuous basis during class,
but it is very hard (for both instructor
students) to attend to. - Better to build specific check-in points into
your lecture?
Slow
16Date Tue, 10 Jan 2006 234404 -0500 To
austenm_at_yorku.ca Subject Chemistry 1001 Hi
Maggie Im a student in your chemistry 1001
class on Tuesday evenings. I just wanted to
welcome you to York. I cant emphasize how nice
it is to have a professor that is up beat and
actually seems to care about the students
level of absorption especially in a course like
chemistry. It is a nice change to say the
least. I hope you have a good experience at
York Sincerely (Name removed)
A few hours after our first class of the term
17Same student (self-identified) on (anonymous)
end-of-term survey
- Ok. First of all Maggie I thought your approach
to this class was excellent. I've never had such
an enthusiastic professor in a chemistry course.
I really thought you made the class more
enjoyable with your enthusiasm. - The coloured cards idea was very smart, the only
thing which was bad was that many people didn't
bring them. - Your office hours were extremely helpful when I
came. - hhmmmm...
- ok toooo many concept questions, anything more
than 10 is a lot.
These are explained in the next section.
18Was the number of questions appropriate?
- a. There were too many questions.
- b. There were about the right number of
questions. - c. There were not enough questions.
- d. Don't know / don't care.
- a b c d
- In-Lecture MC 0 17 8 1
- Concept review 7 16 2 1
- Next year, what should I have more of?
- ? concept review questions ? multiple choice
questions ? both ?
19More MC questions needed
- Clearly many students would like to see more of
these questions, and none felt that there were
too many. - Having more questions would probably also help
with encouraging students to bring their cards to
class, and to take them out and use them. - I would encourage you to have the students take
out their cards right at the beginning of class,
perhaps always starting with a quick question. - The mental barrier to getting them out in the
middle of the class seems to be significantly
higher.
20More recommendations from survey responses of the
1st day e-mailer
- One more thing to mention was that the people who
answer questions are the minority generally, so
when someone yells out an answer and most of the
other people don't know the answer, it's not a
good indication to follow what people shout out
in the middle of class. - Sometimes a small minority would know and a
majority would not know, but when they yell the
answer you'd assume everyone knew, this is not
your fault and Im not blaming you Im just
trying to bring subtle things to your attention.
Sometimes we'd carry on and I'd be lost.
More reason to use the response system more often
and respond to it!
21Titration of strong base with strong acid
Examples of in-class questions
What is the pH at the equivalence point? 10 / 7 /
4
22Solution Buffering and Weak-Strong Titrations
Titration of a weak acid with a strong base
Where is the buffer region? Near pH of 5 / 9 / 12
23Which of the following mixtures are buffers?
These ones should be straight forward for
attentive students
- Equimolar amounts of
- KH2PO4 and H3PO4
- NaClO4 and HClO4
- C5H5N (pyridine) and C5H5NHCl
- Na2CO3 and NaHCO3
- NaOH and HCl
Discuss with a neighbour, then well vote
Yes Dont know No
24Which of the following mixtures are buffers?
These ones are more challenging
- 1 mol KH2PO4 and 0.5 mol HCl
- 1 mol KH2PO4 and 0.5 mol NaOH
- 1 mol NH3 and 0.5 mol NaOH
- 1 mol NH3 and 0.5 mol HCl
- 1 mol NH3 and 1 mol HCl
We need a strategy
Yes Dont know No
25Determining which solutions are buffers.
Here is the strategy, then we tried the last set
again
- Identify all species present as strong/weak (or
neutral) acid/base (or amphiprotic). - Assume all strong acids and bases (H and OH-)
react to completion with any weak bases or acids
present. - Check for significant amounts of both a weak acid
and its conjugate base. (Use the buffer game.) - A common approach is to add half as much strong
acid to a weak base, or half as much strong base
to a weak acid.
26What kind of questions?
- In-class multiple choice can highlight important
points, test key skills or help clarify confusing
details. See acid-base examples above. - I used open-ended concept (p)review questions to
help guide and focus the students reading and to
encourage reflection and application / synthesis
of ideas. - Identify the key points or learning goals for the
chapter / section. Transform these into
questions. - These were posted on webCT before each quiz. I
would have preferred to post them before the
class started each topic, but I was behind all
term in my preparation. - Preview versus reviewnext time!
27For each quiz, I posted to webCT a set of
concept questions for you to answer.
- If and when you did look at these, how useful
(for preparing to write quizzes and exams)
did you find them to be? MC - a. Very useful 9 5
- b. Somewhat useful 14 11
- c. Not very useful 2 8
- d. Very useless 0 2
- e. I never looked at them 1 0
For comparison we saw this data earlier
- Which did the students find more useful
- in preparing for their quizzes and final exam?
- concept review questions ? multiple choice
questions - ? they were equal ?
28Review Questions
- For each quiz, I posted to webCT a set of concept
questions for you to answer while reading the
textbook. - What did you normally do with these questions?
29Review questions as study aids
- When you used these questions to study, which of
the following did you normally do? (Choose all
that apply)Which of the following did you once
or sometimes do?
30PReview Questions
- In the very first lecture I wrote out a set of
questions for you to answer while reading the
textbook. They were later posted on WebCT. - What did you do with these questions?
- In hindsight, what do you wish you had done?
- Read the book and tried to answer the relevant
questions
31For each quiz, I posted to webCT a set of concept
questions for you to answer while reading the
textbook.
- If the later review questions had been available
from the beginning of term, or at least a week in
advance of the lectures, - what do you think you should have done with them?
- what do you think you would have done with them?
- Read the book and tried to answer the relevant
questions
Which way do the answers shift?
Did 1st
32Would you post the answers to review questions?
Yes/Maybe/No
- According to Daniel
- I would have preferred to have solutions
available for the concept/review questions. There
were some questions that I had trouble with. Not
having the accurate solution creates an insecure
atmosphere for the student and is
counter-productive. - Essentially, questions are raised and when I
couldn't get a definitive answer immediately it
left me questioning my understanding of the
subject. - Although I could have made an appointment to
discuss this with you, I didn't find that it was
a time-effective approach. - For example, the use of the study guide with full
solutions to textbook questions proved to be a
tremendous help because when I had difficulty on
any question (assigned or unassigned), I found
the answer immediately and was able to master the
concepts that I had trouble with. - now compare his friend Monika
33Would you post the answers to review questions?
Yes/Maybe/No
- 2. I would like to thank you for bringing
enthusiasms and element of fun to this course. I
would also like to thank you for being so present
and helpful in our electronic discussions. - 3. Maggies review questions are one of the most
useful studying tools. I wish we could have the
rough layout of them at the beginning of each
section and a final, more detailed version at the
beginning of the pre-quiz time. - Having to answer them personally, comparing the
answers with fellow students and you pitching in
the discussion as well was one of the best ways
of mastering the knowledge in a deep and lasting
way. - It was also a breeze to review these notes before
the final exam, yet at the same time it was the
most in-depth review of the whole material.
34Who took the survey?
35Who took the survey?
36Who took the survey?
Similar results for other help sessions available
37Grade Expectations
- At the beginning of term, what grade were you
hoping to achieve in this course? - At the end of term, what grade do you expect to
achieve in this course?
Note this survey was taken after the final exam.
Compare to these students results in CHEM 1000.
38Overall impressions
- Overall, how useful would you say this course was
(relevance of content, etc.)? -
- a. Very useful 14
- b. Somewhat useful 11
- c. Not very useful 1
- d. Pretty useless 0
- Overall, how challenging would you say this
course was? -
- a. Very challenging 17
- b. Somewhat challenging 7
- c. About average 2
- d. Not very challenging 0
- e. Pretty easy 0
39Overall impressions
- Overall, how enjoyable would you say this course
was? -
- a. Very enjoyable 5
- b. Somewhat enjoyable 11
- c. Not very enjoyable 9
- d. Not at all enjoyable 1
- Overall, how would you rate my (Maggie's)
effectiveness in terms of teaching style? -
- a. Very effective 19
- b. Somewhat effective 6
- c. Not very effective 1
- d. Very ineffective 0
40Various students comments on end-of-term survey
- Most students thought that the multiple choice
idea was good, as it made the class interactive. - I thought the interactive and personal approach
that you used was excellent in providing a
comfortable teacher-student relationship. You
were very approachable which facilitated
discussions. - You are a great teacher, you know your material
very well and more importantly, you know how to
deliver it. I love your teaching style and
presentation skills. I wish you all the best.
Thank You. - If it wasn't for your innovative way of teaching
I don't think I would have passed my quizzes.
Your lecture notes were extremely helpful,
perfect supplement to the text (which at times
was confusing) until I re-read it. I enjoyed your
enthusiasm, you made taking chem fun The
examples you added to your lecture notes were
great as well as the problem sets (very helpful).
41More unsolicited e-mail, from a different student
- Date Fri, 24 Feb 2006 133633 -0500 To
austenm_at_yorku.ca - Subject chem 1000 feedback.
- Good afternoon Professor,
- I just want to compliment on your superior
teaching skills, care for students, joyful
personality, and stringent method of open-based
inquiry for students. - Certainly, as a student who once geared going to
Mcmaster (and was accepted), I can see why
Mcmaster's education is top class bar none. I
have never met a professor _at_ York so committed to
his/her work like yourself. Kudos!!!!! - Many thanks.
- (Name removed)
- P.S. any reasons for coming to York?
- Any plans to teach more courses, etc?
- Thanks again.
- Enjoy the sunshine )
End of reading week.
I used to teach at McMaster, before my mat leave.
42Engaged students loved it!(and got the highest
marks in the class)
Final thoughts
- Others were less happy with the approach I took.
- Combined with non-traditional demographics and a
bad schedule, this led to low attendance on most
nights. - Most (?) appreciated the fact that I expressed my
interest in their learning process. What did the
other 75 think? - How to get more students engaged?
- Will it work with a class of 500, rather than
100? - What are the implications for doing this in the
largest section of a multi-section course (versus
the smallest)? - I emphasized ideas, but the exam emphasized
numerical problem solving. Marks suffered. What
to do about this?