POLL EVERYWHERE: I use Google Forms regularly to collect assignment responses from my students, so I decided to play around with PollEverywhere a bit. I signed up for a free account. I like that with Poll Everywhere, you can create a poll that can either be clicked on for Web Voting OR can be embedded as a Live Chart in which viewers can text their responses. I decided to create polls I could use at the start of the school year with both my colleagues and my students, similar in their topic.
Here is a poll I created that I would use to ask my colleagues at the end of August. I think this would give an idea of our staff strengths/weaknesses, needs, and thinking directly from the minds of our staff. This might be helpful for our PBIS team to support staff as the year begins.
Here is a similar one I would use with my students, having them borrow one of my class iPads or complete at home, during the first week of school. This would hopefully help build some quality discussion in my classes and help students see that while they are all different and unique, they are working toward common goals.
My complaint about PollEverywhere is that I didn't find the ease of embedding iinto this blog post that I find with Google Forms. The snippet appears in my HTML compose view but looks empty under the traditional Compose view. I also can't figure out how to center the polls so that they are not to the left. Perhaps I just need to research some HTML code for that... but being able to see my Google Form from the regular Compose view where I can choose to center it myself with the traditional "justify" option makes my like Google Forms better.
GOOGLE FORMS: PollEverywhere is fine if I want responses anonymous, but for instructional purposes, I definitely prefer Google Forms. I am excited that this year we are able to input images into the forms - what an improvement this will be both visually and for units in which images are essential to understanding, such as geometry. Here is one example of a Google Form I created last year that I posted on my Moodle page beneath my math video. Students would watch the video, respond by completing the form, and the data would be available to me immediately. I used that data to decide who was learning what the next morning. This formative assessment tool made a big impact on the way I taught math last year. I had a much better idea of who understood what BEFORE the kids walked in the door last year, compared to previous years when I needed to spend time asking questions and figuring that out as the class period progressed.
Very cool. I like that you can have them watch and respond all at the same time/place. I may need some tutor time with you!! :)
ReplyDeleteImpressive post, Amanda! It looks like you have got this down!
ReplyDeleteWell done! I (of course) especially like the poll for feedback on the triangles. I'm curious: with anonymous mode, do you sometimes get goofy responses? I would think the "Name Required" feature of Google Forms would minimize or even eliminate that.
ReplyDeleteWow, super comprehensive! I love the idea of polling and then having it graphically show the results. All of your examples are incredibly useful!
ReplyDeleteThese both showed up beautifully on your blog. They are both fun ways to gather information, start a discussion, and inform future instruction.
ReplyDeleteVery cool idea with the PollEverywhere. I didn't really consider the anonymity aspect of PollEverywhere. That makes it both limiting and especially useful depending on what kind of information you are after.
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