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Kindergarten twitterati?
A 5-year-old tech start-up called Smartroom Learning Solutions, based in Georgia, offers an interactive classroom system called Beyond Question.With it, students get wireless remote controls that let them answer multiple-choice questions. Once they've all answered a question by pressing their buttons, the teacher uses another remote to flash the correct answer on the screen and show, with automatically generated graphs, how many of the students got it right.
Kathleen Schofield, an instructor at Argyle Elementary School in Florida, has been using the system for about a year to teach science. With it, she assesses her class to figure out what they know, so she can plan her lessons. During lessons, she poses questions to make sure everyone has grasped concepts before she moves on. She sometimes uses it for official quizzes -- quizzes that offer instant feedback to students, instead of coming back in a few days.
For students, "it has a real-life connection," she notes. "It also builds community in the learning environment, as they love it when everyone is successful."
Perhaps most important, the SRS, or "student response system," boosts classroom enthusiasm.
"On the days that they saw 'SRS' on the list," she observes of when they walked in the room, "I always heard them go 'yessss ...'
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nukemdomis
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (3)
at 13:18 on June 12th, 2008
You're never too young to microblog!
at 16:37 on June 12th, 2008
get my advice.
buy a sortiment of writing tools: pencils, ball pens, ink pens, permanent markers.
buy various types of paper (such as photocopier paper, lined paper).
and then visualize your content on paper.
people should use computers fo recreation, for instance nintendo...not in the school.
OK reading it twice it looks that people like this system. but i think these yes/no what is the... quizzes can be dangerous. OKOK elementary school. there are maybe questions which can be answered by yes/no, .......is a .......
this stuff can be seen in a movie called "back to the future" (for the drivers license). actually one guy fails the computer tests, and his whole life changes- basically, to a wrong future.
i would love to link the scene to the comment- but that's utopia i think. however the movie is not too much unknown to be mentioned.
at 17:27 on June 12th, 2008
Finally schools are joining the 3rd millennium. It has always struck me as odd that while every other facet of life advances technologically schools are stuck in some kind of twisted time warp of chalk dust and spit balls. Ah, spit balls....