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Classroom Technology Work at University of Washington

Classroom Technology Work at University of Washington. Richard Anderson (UW) Ruth Anderson (UVa) Steve Wolfman (UBC). Educational Technology.

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Classroom Technology Work at University of Washington

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  1. Classroom Technology Work at University of Washington Richard Anderson (UW) Ruth Anderson (UVa) Steve Wolfman (UBC)

  2. Educational Technology …in the winter of 1813 & '14 … I attended a mathematical school kept in Boston…On entering his room, we were struck at the appearance of an ample Black Board suspended on the wall, with lumps of chalk on a ledge below, and cloths hanging at either side. I had never heard of such a thing before. [Samuel J. May, 1855]

  3. Goal: Improve interaction in the classroom • Provide flexible mechanism for delivery presentation • Support interaction between student and instructor devices around presentation materials

  4. Classroom Presenter • Integration of slides and digital ink using Tablet PC • Key ideas: • Ink overlay on images • Distributed application • Many other systems also support ink and slides

  5. Ink Usage In Exposition • Initial motivation • Increase flexibility of slide based presentation • Adjust presentation in response to the audience

  6. When is ink important? • Ink is NOT always important for slide based presentation • Classroom presentation is different from professional / conference / meeting presentation • Ink is important when: • The instructor interacts with the audience • Displayed material is the focus of attention

  7. Examples of Ink Usage • Slides from selected university courses • Demonstrate range of use in class

  8. Attentional ink and incidental writing

  9. Writing with mathematical content

  10. Stepping through example

  11. Diagram augmentation

  12. Diagram AugmentationInstructor view

  13. Rich Diagrams

  14. Fill-in simulation

  15. Process Trace

  16. Collective Brainstorming

  17. Collective BrainstormInstructor View

  18. Ink based demonstrationQuikwrite [Perlin, NYU]

  19. Instructor notes INSTRUCTOR NOTE • Different layers available in different views • Base, Instructor, Student, Shared • PPT Plug in allows creation of notes

  20. Presenter Configurations • Single Machine (1 Tablet PC) • Direct projection from instructor view • Single view, tethered • Projection of second monitor from tablet • Multiple views, but tethered • Multiple Machine (1 Tablet PC + Other devices) • Wireless connection to display view • Multiple views, untethered • Distance learning and integration with student devices

  21. Tablet PC Ink Multiple Colors Highlighter Stroke Erase Page Erase Undo Slide Minimize Whiteboard Multiple Decks Filmstrip Navigation Slide previews Ink Export Presenter Features

  22. Form factor issues • Carrying the tablet while lecturing • Some like to carry the tablet, others don’t • Weight and size are issues • Eye gaze is a problem • Vision angle and reflection can be problems for instructor • Tablet button fumbles • “And I see Windows is shutting down” • “Here is the Australian view”

  23. Interaction with student devices • Student note taking • Classroom Presenter Student View, RemarkableText (Brown U.), One Note • Embedded Classroom Activities • SIP (Structured Interaction Presentations) • Student Submissions

  24. Resources • cs.washington.edu/education/dl/presenter/ • Software Downloads • Papers • Contact info • Richard Anderson, anderson@cs.washington.edu • Ruth Anderson, ruth@cs.virginia.edu • Steve Wolfman, wolf@cs.washington.edu

  25. Student Submissions with Classroom Presenter Ruth Anderson

  26. Student Submissions • Students annotate slide • Submit ink to instructor • Instructor selectively displays student responses to the class Motivation: to promote student involvement with lecture

  27. Trace the path of Lewis and Clark from Saint Louis to Astoria

  28. Find the roots of x2 + 3x + 4

  29. Show that increasing supply of housing lowers equilibrium price p pe 100 QD,QS

  30. Student Submissions • Supports Active Learning where students with Tablet PCs can complete an activity • submit anonymously • student work reviewed/discussed/augmented selectively by instructor • electronic copy of student work available after class • use rich backgrounds and color

  31. Preliminary experiences • Problem solving in parallel • Multiple solutions and misconceptions • Allow independent work • Spontaneous activities with structure • Build on instructor designs or scaffolding

  32. Uncover Common Errors

  33. Compare Different Approaches

  34. Use Background Slide & Color

  35. Solve Different Problems in Parallel

  36. Problem Solving

  37. Assessment of Student Learning

  38. Spontaneous Activities

  39. Resources • cs.washington.edu/education/dl/presenter/ • Software Downloads • Papers • Contact info • Richard Anderson, anderson@cs.washington.edu • Ruth Anderson, ruth@cs.virginia.edu • Steve Wolfman, wolf@cs.washington.edu

  40. Steve Wolfman • Structured Interaction Presentations

  41. lecture active learning student-directed instructor-dominated interactive disconnected participatory passive Overgeneralization borne out by research Modern Pedagogy vs. Modern Practice ~80-90% lectures Thielens, 1987

  42. Goals of Structured Interaction Presentation System (SIP) Make design and execution of interactive presentations as easy as for passive ones. • Keep best of PPT & augment interaction • Integrate into the “mediating” slides • Support intuitive and flexible design • Facilitate interaction in class • Enable new kinds of interaction “transitions”, apprehension e.g., data reuse, intentional grouping, DHC; Also old kinds like “Is PPT Evil?”

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