Monday, February 9, 2015

Using Cell Phones for Informative Assessment | Technology Teach-In

As a developing student teacher, I, at times, feel overwhelmed in my efforts to appease the continual onslaught of lesson planning. Hours of my week are put toward the gathering of materials and formation of realistic lesson plans—delusions of grandeur must at times be tamed by the reality of material resources and tweaked to more effectively address the context of my particular school placement. Recently, my professors have challenged my classmates and I to individually develop a lesson plan that integrates one of the everyday technological tools—blogs, wikis, cell phones, Diigo, or Twitter, to name a few—we have discussed in class. Given the context of my placement, this assignment is both challenging and intriguing.

When I assess the technological resources at my placement school, I am underwhelmed. Due to the normal financial issues that act as the Achilles Heel of many schools, the technological resources at my placement are limited. Those that do exist are in poor working condition or spread thin between the faculty. As I have discussed in one of my previous blogs, the ever present and most robust form of technology in my school resides the pockets, purses, or hands of many students: cell phones.

Cell phone usage in the classroom is normally discouraged by the faculty as it a source of distraction for students. Yet, in this new day and age where young babies know how to swipe on a cell phone or iPad before they can even speak—a scary thought—the prevalence and usage of cell phones in the classroom is becoming ever more commonplace. Although I recognize the negative impacts they can have in the classroom, I am challenged to change my perspective. How could cell phones be used in the classroom to further a student's learning?

This question served as the impetus behind the design of this technologically integrated lesson plan.

I am currently teaching Environmental Science, and I have been seeking out methods of assessment that I can use to develop a better understanding of where my students are in their mastery of the content and what misconceptions need to be addressed. Using polleverywhere.com, cell phones can help with this process!

This online polling system provides me the opportunity to ask my students questions to assess their understandings anytime during a lesson. Using their cell phones, students can anonymously text their answers to the prompt, and the responses will be tabulated in real time! The visual analysis will allow students to compare their understandings to that of the class, which presents an opportunity for student self-assessment, and it tells me how well students understanding the concept in question.

Below is a schematic of the entire process:



Using Poll Everywhere as a means on informative assessment in my future lesson plan will serve to uphold several of the student and teacher standards as set forth by the International Society of Technology and Education (ISTE). By utilizing Poll Everywhere as an activity in the classroom, students will be meeting the student standards for creativity and innovation, communication and collaboration, and digital citizenship (ISTE student standards 1, 2, & 5, respectfully). Using this technology tool, I can facilitate student learning, design digital assessments, and promote digital citizenship and responsibility (ISTE teacher standards 1, 2, & 4, respectfully).

The use of cell phones in the classroom is currently considered an issue of classroom management and an example of poor behavior. Applications such as Poll Everywhere may serve to change this perspective. This mental shift, however, could backfire if not properly framed ahead of time as students may view this activity as an encouragement to further utilize their phones during class. The reward of this activity, however, is enticing, and I look forward to implementing it in my classroom.

5 comments:

  1. I think you're exactly right to think about leveraging mobile technology in this way, as a tool for (in)formative assessment--a felicitous turn of a phrase--in real time. You're asking some excellent questions as you formulate your ideas, Jesse, and I encourage more of the same. What are your conjectures about what employing this tool and this app in this particular way will do for your students and their learning? What do you think it might do for you as a teacher, and what for the classroom learning environment? My sense is that there are some specific kinds of moments in your Environmental Science classroom where you're imagining that leveraging phones and poll everywhere could speak to issues of learning and teaching, and I'll be interested to read more about those conjectures, how they shape your final plan, and what you observe and learn from enacting your plan.
    Your plan sounds very auspicious indeed, Jesse.

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  2. Hi Jesse,

    As a mobile phone nerd, I applaud your efforts to use mobile devices in such a way as to prove that they can be utility items for students, and not just play-things (I think this is also important for students to see as well) I have considered trying to coordinate something like this in my placement, but was unsure about 1) whether all of my students would have access, (I suppose I would have to ask them first) and 2) what the cost-benefit would look like if they were only bringing their phones every so often, to one class out of seven. (Granted, I am at a Middle School, so things are a bit different.) I suppose my question to you is, then, are you planning on making this a daily routine, entrance/exit ticket type deal, or a daily routine buzzer system, or is this going to be more of a special event/occasion activity, that gets used every so often, but not daily? Please let us know how this goes for you!

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  3. Jesse, this is an awesome idea! I wish I could use cell phones in my class. I feel that you are making great use of technology given your environmental circumstances. I feel that by having students provide real time responses to prompts you ask you instill healthy competition and students will have fun anticipating to see the poll results. I wonder what kind of preparation you will do if students do not have a phone on them. What other worries may you have about implementing this tool? I really love this idea and I would like to hear how it went! I think in the future if my school allows I may copy this idea as a means to conduct exit tickets in class (if cell phones are permitted in the classroom). Best of luck my friend!

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  4. Jesse, this is an awesome idea! I wish I could use cell phones in my class. I feel that you are making great use of technology given your environmental circumstances. I feel that by having students provide real time responses to prompts you ask you instill healthy competition and students will have fun anticipating to see the poll results. I wonder what kind of preparation you will do if students do not have a phone on them. What other worries may you have about implementing this tool? I really love this idea and I would like to hear how it went! I think in the future if my school allows I may copy this idea as a means to conduct exit tickets in class (if cell phones are permitted in the classroom). Best of luck my friend!

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  5. -Jesse
    I heard of this tool, and I think it sounds awesome! I agree with you that cell phones have become such an integral part of our students' lives that we might as well incorporate them into our lesson plans. I think that Poll Everywhere could be an excellent tool to see where students' understandings are and also it will be more fun for students than a typical assessment. I think there are very good chances that this will be successful in the classroom, if not for the novelty of using their cell phones, but I think students will also be receptive to doing something new and fun. Buena suerte!

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