Hello! I am an Algebra teacher and I am lucky enough to be working at a school implementing a 1:1 learning environment next year. Each fresman (1,800 total across our two buildings) will get a tablet PC when they arrive. I am having great fun (and spending endless hours) designing our learning environment and activities. I have one problem I haven't yet resolved, and I thought my pals here might have ideas!
I'd like to incorporate a daily "quiz" into the opening of class (I have 5 classes of 30+ students for 55 minutes each). In a non-computerized setting, these would be little half or quarter sheets of paper that I could grade and record (the whole class) in about 10 minutes. I would hand them back later that period (if I had done them during class) or the next day. That way, students could get feedback right away and revise the quiz for a higher score in the next day or so.
The tablet feature makes using computer devices for math like this a reality! I need to see students actually do the math to help find misunderstandings or mistakes. Since they can write a response to any problem, this will be great!
So...in this virtual environment...how to manage this? If I have them all write on their tablet to do their quiz (pre-scanned or saved for their access), then do they email it to me (I mark and email back)? Seems unmanageable! I could create a document library to which they submit, say in SharePoint, but how to I annotate and return to them individually without sending 150 separate emails a day? I thought they might be able to share a MS OneNote file with me (and keep everything in one notebook), but I think that would have me logging my credentials into 150 different notebooks. I know there must be a doable way! Any thoughts?
I really like the idea of having these little byte-sized (pun intended) grades and formative assessments to use in the class, but it's a daily event I need to figure out how to manage!
Thanks for your expert opinions!
Darcy Newell
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Hi Darcy,
My name is Pablo Benvenuto and have been developing with my partners a new Learning Management System, which is free, and it provides exactly what you are looking for, a way to quickly create a quiz, immediate feedback to the students and immediate reporting back to you. Please check it out at http://www.studybuddycampus.com and let me know what you think. I will be happy to help you navigate through it. pablo.benvenuto@studybuddycampus.com
I'm in the same boat as you are but with foreign languages. Our freshmen will be getting their devices in November and I also want them to do some bell ringer activities and submit them to me. I'm following your replies to see if someone has a good solution on how to submit the student work.
I might have an answer for the handwriting part of your quizzes but it is a multi-step process. Since tablets have a touch interface, if there is a program that allows them to write on the tablet such as a whiteboard app, they could do their math problems there. Then they need another application or the option to take a screenshot of what they just did and send that picture to you. You then will need software that allows you to mark directly on their pictures just as you would one of their papers. Finally you need a quick way to send the picture back to the student. I can see this last part being a timely thing if you need to email each student their quiz back. I am also struggling with finding a solution for this aspect if I don't use Moodle or Google Docs. I like both of these but sometimes they meet my formatting needs. I don't think either one will work for you to see their handwriting.
I thought that there has to be something on the Internet about collecting student work. I found the following websites that might be helpful.
From FreeTech4Teachers:http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2010/02/use-dropio-upload-widget-t...
This describe adding a drop.io widget to your blog or website.
Also from FreeTech4Teachers: http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2011/09/7-ways-to-avoid-inbox-over... This page describes different services that work like a inbox.
If you have a dropbox account, the following link might be useful.
http://citrushightechnology.com/blog/?p=56
As far as I can tell, none of these address the issue of returning the work to the students. If I missed that, let me know.
Darcy, MS One Note sounds like a good option. We won't have the MS suite on our tablets so that won't be an option for me. Since SharePoint is a Microsoft product, that won't be an option for me either but we are a Google school. I just know that Google changes some formatting options when it converts docs to its format and sometimes the formatting matters. Maybe I need to get past the formatting issues and just accept plain text.
If SharePoint allows the students to upload to your doc library and then gives them only rights to see their own work, it sounds like you have a solution. If it works like Google Docs, once the file is shared with someone and is in a Google docs format, both people can access it and edit it. Google Docs even has a history timeline so you can see if one of your cherubs changed something after you graded it. The problem is this only works if the file is converted to a Google docs format. I hope you have better luck with SharePoint and MS One Note.
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