Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- I An Introduction to Teaching Mathematics with Classroom Voting
- II Studies of Classroom Voting in Mathematics
- III Classroom Voting in Specific Mathematics Classes
- 6 Questions to Engage Students in Discussion (Q.E.D): Using Clickers in a Mathematics for Liberal Arts Course
- 7 Clickers in Introductory Statistics Courses
- 8 Using Clickers in a Statistics Classroom
- 9 Engaging Statistics Students with Classroom Response Systems
- 10 Incorporating Clicker Technology in the Introductory Statistics Course
- 11 Using Clickers in Courses for Future K–8 Teachers
- 12 Using Clickers in Professional DevelopmentWorkshops
- 13 Using ConcepTests in College Algebra
- 14 An Example of Multi-Purpose Use of Clickers in College Algebra
- 15 ConcepTests—Classroom Voting: A Catalyst for an Interactive College Algebra ClassroomD
- 16 Using Clickers to Encourage Communication and Self-Reflection in Precalculus
- 17 Writing and Adapting Classroom Voting Questions: New Functions from Old
- 18 Enhancing Student Participation and Attitudes in a Large-Lecture Calculus Course
- 19 Good Questions for Mathematics Eduction: An Example from Multivariable Calculus
- 20 Integrating Classroom Voting Into Your Lectures: Some Thoughts and Examples from a Differential Equations Course
- 21 Classroom Voting Questions that Provoke Teachable Moments in Differential Equations
- 22 Teaching Linear Algebra with Classroom Voting: A Class Period on Linear Independence
- 23 Lesson Planning with Classroom Voting: An Example from Linear Algebra
- 24 Using Clickers to Enhance Learning in Upper-Level Mathematics Courses
- Bibliography
- About the Editors
18 - Enhancing Student Participation and Attitudes in a Large-Lecture Calculus Course
from III - Classroom Voting in Specific Mathematics Classes
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- I An Introduction to Teaching Mathematics with Classroom Voting
- II Studies of Classroom Voting in Mathematics
- III Classroom Voting in Specific Mathematics Classes
- 6 Questions to Engage Students in Discussion (Q.E.D): Using Clickers in a Mathematics for Liberal Arts Course
- 7 Clickers in Introductory Statistics Courses
- 8 Using Clickers in a Statistics Classroom
- 9 Engaging Statistics Students with Classroom Response Systems
- 10 Incorporating Clicker Technology in the Introductory Statistics Course
- 11 Using Clickers in Courses for Future K–8 Teachers
- 12 Using Clickers in Professional DevelopmentWorkshops
- 13 Using ConcepTests in College Algebra
- 14 An Example of Multi-Purpose Use of Clickers in College Algebra
- 15 ConcepTests—Classroom Voting: A Catalyst for an Interactive College Algebra ClassroomD
- 16 Using Clickers to Encourage Communication and Self-Reflection in Precalculus
- 17 Writing and Adapting Classroom Voting Questions: New Functions from Old
- 18 Enhancing Student Participation and Attitudes in a Large-Lecture Calculus Course
- 19 Good Questions for Mathematics Eduction: An Example from Multivariable Calculus
- 20 Integrating Classroom Voting Into Your Lectures: Some Thoughts and Examples from a Differential Equations Course
- 21 Classroom Voting Questions that Provoke Teachable Moments in Differential Equations
- 22 Teaching Linear Algebra with Classroom Voting: A Class Period on Linear Independence
- 23 Lesson Planning with Classroom Voting: An Example from Linear Algebra
- 24 Using Clickers to Enhance Learning in Upper-Level Mathematics Courses
- Bibliography
- About the Editors
Summary
Introduction
Good communication is essential in every relationship. This includes the relationship that I cultivate with my students as individuals and with my class as a whole. A personal response system, “clickers,” is a tool that I have employed to aide communication.
While there are a variety of options for engaging students in the classroom, I specifically chose this technology because my students are part of the Millennial generation and I believed clickers would be a means to engage them using a digital form of communication. They've grown up with technology playing a role in nearly every facet of their lives, with this likely to increase as time passes. A May 2008 report from In-Stat predicts “a steady growth rate culminating in the number of US millennia's subscribing to mobile social networking reaching nearly 30 million by the year 2012 [46].” Many attributes of the clicker emulate my students' current social networks. At the simplest level, my students become members of a group by enrolling in the course. However, the ability to efficiently ask the entire class for input on a topic, followed with the means to immediately share the overall results with them, actually allows them to communicate with each other, as well as with me.
Background
I teach at a regional university with an enrollment a little over 10,000 which offers 77 different majors, and graduate programs in 22 different fields.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Teaching Mathematics with Classroom VotingWith and Without Clickers, pp. 121 - 126Publisher: Mathematical Association of AmericaPrint publication year: 2011
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