Software Development Process

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Creating online learning with Riddle

 tháng 11 06, 2015     action research, elearning, interactive, quiz     No comments   

On the surface Riddle is a great free tool for creating a variety of quizzes and polls that can have rich media embedded into them, but when you look below the surface it's actually a pretty sophisticated tool for quickly authoring engaging elearning.


Creating a Riddle is easy
Go to: http://www.riddle.com and sign up. Then you will see the different quiz types. The main types of interactions you can create are:

  • Opinion polls - These are simple single question polls which can contain a number of fixed response for the recipient to choose from.
  • Lists - Lists aren’t questions as such, they are more like a nice way of presenting information in a series of chunks. Each chunk of information can also have media or text embedded into it. This would make a great way of presenting infographic type information in a more mobile friendly way.
  • Pop quiz - A pop quiz can contain a number of multiple choice questions. Pop quizzes can be scored across percentage of correct answers. Students can also get feedback on each answer within the quiz and you can attach specific messages to scores to tell students what they need to do in response to their score.
  • Personality tests - With this kind of test you can create a number of questions for participants to answer and link the answers to specific personality types. So for example if the participant answer a to all questions they are shown their a personality type. You can actually create the different personality types yourself.
  • Surveys - Surveys are the most flexible poll type. You can have a choice of different question types from text fields for written input to single choice or multiple select questions.
You can either click on ‘New’ to start from a blank template or click on ‘Template' and you’ll see an example of that type of quiz which should give you an idea of how to create one yourself.
Most quiz types start with some kind of introduction screen where you outline the theme and purpose of the quiz. With Riddle it’s easy to add media to this part of the quiz just by clicking on the media type and searching for it or uploading your own file.
Then add the questions and potential answers. You can also add a score the answer in the pop quiz type questions and some explanatory feedback.
Once you have added the questions you can customise the look of the quiz by changing colours or fonts.
Then once the quiz is complete you can share either a URL or embed code or post it directly to your social network accounts.

The responses to all the questions are collected within the platform and you can view and download these by clicking on ‘Statistics’ (to download a csv file you need a pro account) so this provides a form of LMS though it doesn’t enable you to identify specific students (again you would need a pro version to do that).

How to use Riddle with learners
  • Riddle is pretty simple and quick to learn so you can get students to create their own research questionnaires. These could be for classroom research or they could share them through social media networks. You could use infographics to base the research on and get students to do parallel research and create their own infographic.
  • You could get students using the List option as tasks to report on films or reading assignments. They could create a ten point list to include the ten most important features of the book or film.
  • You can create opinion polls to lead into classroom discussion. This would give students the opportunity to think about the issues before they come into class. You could then follow this up with a second poll to see how many people had changed their mind about the issue.
  • You could use the list option to have mock elections. Students could use the list to create a ten point election manifesto. The students could then look through them and decide who they would like to vote for.
  • You can use lists to present different aspects of verb tenses with a section each on meaning, form, pronunciation, time lines and usage. You could also include links to videos or songs where the verb tense is being used.
  • You can use personality tests to identify learning styles and make students more aware of them. You just need to define the different learning styles and then add answers to the multiple choice questions that identify each style.
  • You can create a pre test to get students thinking around topic you want to teach and to find out what they already know about it.
  • You can use Riddle as part of flipped learning approach with video embedded into quizzes or polls. Then you can collect students’ answers and go into class with a clear understanding of what they have understood from the material.
  • You can embed articles, short stories or video clips in the pop quiz or surveys and then build them into  complete online course.
What I like about Riddle
  • The free option still gives lots of scope for creativity.
  • There is a great range of quiz types.
  • The simplicity of creating the quizzes makes this easy for students to learn quickly
  • I love the choice of media and how easy it is to embed media into the quizzes.
  • I like the way the personality type quiz answers can be set up with sliders to refine the way the answers apply to the different personality types.
  • The list type quizzes are a great way to segment the presentation of new materials
I hope you enjoy using Riddle and create some useful interactive learning materials.

Related links:
  • Digital Video - A manual for language teachers
  • Managing the digital classroom - Using a backchannel
  • Managing the digital classroom - Getting students' attention
  • 20 + Things you can do with QR codes in your school
  • Brainstorming and polling with AnswerGarden
  • Creating illustrations and infographics for ELT tasks

Best
Nik Peachey



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    Crowdsourcing Knowledge with Students

     tháng 6 24, 2011     action research, poll, quiz     No comments   

    Over the last few weeks I have been playing with a very simple brainstorming and voting website called tricider. The great thing about tricider is that it is incredibly quick and simple to use, and yet it enables users to collect information and opinions from all over the web in a very easily digestible and powerful way.

    It's very easy to create a tricider topic or question and you don't even need to register, just type your topic or question into the field.


    You can also add a bit more detail and instructions to guide your students.

    After you have saved the description, you or your students can start adding solutions.

    Once there are some solutions added it's easy to either vote for them or add arguments for or against, using the + or - symbols.


    Once you have set up your page you can add your email so that you get notifications when ever anyone adds something new or votes. You can also get a URL to edit the page (in case anyone adds something offensive) and a separate URL to either share with your students or post to Twtter or Facebook.

    Here are some examples that I have set up to crowdsource in formation from my PLN.
    • What digital skills do students need for the 21st century?
    • How do we encourage pedagogically sound exploitation of technology in language learning?
    • What do you want from a digital coursebook for EFL / ESL?
    So how can we use this with students?
    • Set up some controversial statements and get students to vote for the ones they agree / disagree with and leave pro and con comments. You could assign groups of students to all think of pros and another group to think of cons and see which can come up with the most convincing arguments. Example: Controversial Issues
    • Your statements could be about a particular book your students are studying and they could add arguments for or against. Example: Goldilocks and the 3 Bears
    • Get students to brainstorm word or phrases based around a theme. Example: Computer Phrases
    • Get students to vote on a list of topics they want to study. Example: Topics
    • Put up a list of favourite films or books or bands and get students to vote and debate which is best. Example: Favourite films
    • Get students to brainstorm, debate and share knowledge about any particular topic or even language point. Example: Present Continuous
    • Set up true false questions to check comprehension of a text.
    • Create action research questionnaires to get feedback on the things you do in class. Example: Things we do in Class
    • Create needs analysis questionnaires for your students or other colleagues. Example: Needs Analysis
    • Get students create their own questionnaires and circulate them online (through Twitter or Facebook) to collect opinions. You could also get the students to use this information as part of a written assignment.

    Find out more

    What's so good about tricider?
    • It's free and really quick and easy to use.
    • It's allows people to interact and share opinions.
    • It doesn't require any registration.
    • It's very simple for students to add their arguments or just vote.
    • It updates very quickly so you could use it live in class and just click refresh as students add opinions or vote.
    • It's versatile.
    • It can help students pull in opinions from outside their classroom and also share opinions beyond their school.
    • It creates easily digestible information.
    What's not so good?
    • Well there's not much wrong, but a couple of nice extra features would be:
    • An embed code to allow me to embed the page into a blog or wiki.
    • An archive button to enable me to close some of the debates so they don't go on forever.
    • The ability to export the results to pdf or csv.
    Well I hope you find tricider a useful tool and please do share any ideas you have for using it in the comments below.

    Related links:
    • Tools for creating polls and surveys 
    • Tools and alternatives for creating presentations 
    • My books

    Best

    Nik Peachey
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    Making quizzes for i-pod

     tháng 11 30, 2007     mobile learning, questions forms, quiz, revision     No comments   

    With the growth in interest in mobile learning and the ubiquitous nature of the i-pod among our younger (and increasingly older) students this piece of software looks like a really useful tool we can use to extend learning beyond the classroom.

    The software I’m referring to is I-Quiz Maker. You can download I-Quiz Maker for free at:
    http://www.iquizmaker.com/

    Once you’ve installed it you can make quizzes using either True / False question types or Multiple Choice questions. The quizzes a very simple to make and you can make as many questions as you like and as many quizzes, as you like.
    • This demo tutorial shows you how to create the quiz
    This looks like a really useful tool to:
    • help revise and develop your students vocabulary. You can write a vocabulary quiz and up- date it each week with new words that your students have learned
    • get the students to create quizzes for each other and share them
    • set up revision exercises
    Although there is a bit of work involved in creating the quizzes, once you made them you’ll be able to keep them and use them again with other students.

    Once you have finished creating your quiz you can then export it to your desktop and it can be uploaded to the I-pod through I-Tunes. The only catch here is that you and / or your students will need to buy the I-Quiz game for your I-pod. It is really cheap though (less than 1 US dollar / 79 p in the UK) and it does come with some ready-made quizzes.

    What I like about it
    • You can set the quizzes so that students get a maximum number of questions in each game and so that they loose after a specific number of wrong answers. This should make it more competitive.
    • The game will randomise the questions so you could input 50 questions and they would get 10 or 20 random questions each game.
    • It’s very easy to use and is just simple point and click
    • You can update quizzes so that they grow as your students’ knowledge grows
    • There's a version for PC and for MAC!

    What I’m not so sure about
    • Students will need an i-pod, they can’t just run the quiz on their computer or i-Tunes
    • The game is only compatible with Fifth generation i-pods (This may become an advantage as more people trade up to more modern versions and the older ones become available more cheaply second hand) which isn’t much help for students with older i-pods.
    • I couldn’t get the user manual to download so there wasn’t much documentation to help me learn how to use the software
    • I think there may have been one more question type, but I couldn’t get the button for it to work ??
    • Students will have to buy the I-Quiz game (though as I said it’s quite cheap) and that means setting up an i-tunes account.
    On the whole though, despite the above drawbacks, if you have a classroom full of students who carry i-pods about then this could be just the thing for you.

    Let me know how it goes

    Best

    Nik
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    Interactive multiple choice activities

     tháng 11 30, 2007     interactive, quiz, Word processor, words     No comments   

    This is the third part in a series that I’m writing on how to use word processors to create computer-based materials. This one looks at how we can create interactive multiple choice activities using 'dropdown' menus.

    Multiple choice must be one of the most common question types in the history of education. I’m sure we all answered them when we were at school and we have all given these question types to our students.

    When I was at school, we used to call them ‘multiple guess’ questions, because we knew that even if we didn’t have any idea what the correct answer was, it had to be one of the choices, so we had a 1 in 4 or 1 in 5 chance of guessing the answer correctly.

    In the movie tutorial you will see how to insert the dropdown menu, add your choices and also add a ‘help text’ which can be used to give clues or the correct answer.
    • Dropdown tutorial movie
    Students access the ‘help text’ by clicking on the dropdown field and pressing F1 on the computer keyboard.

    Here’s document with some interactive fields in. Click on them and then push F1 on your keyboard to see how they work.
    • Dropdown examples
    There are a range of ways you can give clues
    • Direct students to a part of the text
    • Remind them about time relationships (for verb tense exercises)
    • Remind them of context
    • Remind them about part of speech or word morphology
    • Give them pronunciation clues (it sounds like)
    • Give a translation
    • Remind them of the unit of the coursebook / lesson when you covered the topic
    Adding clues, rather than correct answers, will help to make the exercises developmental rather than a test of knowledge / memory.

    You also need to be careful in your choice of words both when you select the word that you want to use from the dropdown activity and when you add your choices.

    If you are selecting words from a text, then look for clues within the context which will help the students to deduce which word is correct.

    When you add the ‘distractor’ words, try to make them reasonable alternatives. You could use this exercise to focus students on common problems, by using errors from their own written texts and the correct version as alternatives. If you do this, don’t focus only on their negative aspects, but also try to include some of their positive aspects of their work, like good use of vocabulary.

    Anyway, hope you find this useful and by all means leave a comment if you have used this feature in other ways.

    Best

    Nik
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