PeerWise workshop at NTU Singapore

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student generated content for enhanced engagement and learning Simon Bates [email protected] The University of Bri7sh Columbia

Transcript of PeerWise workshop at NTU Singapore

student  generated  content  for  enhanced  engagement  and  learning  

Simon  Bates  [email protected]  The  University  of  Bri7sh  Columbia  

Overview  for  the  session  

1)    About  PeerWise    2)    Hands-­‐on  session      3)  Research  highlights    4)  Q&A          

student  generated  content  for  enhanced  engagement  and  learning  

1)    About  PeerWise  

student  generated  content  for  enhanced  engagement  and  learning  

a  web-­‐based  MCQ  repository  created  by  students  

InsFtuFons    signing  up  per  year:    

2009:      22  2010:      66  2011:      204  2012:      266  2013  (Jan-­‐Jun):    214  

Growing  content  repository:    Courses:    2,500  Logins/month:    75,000  Ques7ons:    600,000  Answers:    12,000,000  

0

5,000,000

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Dec 09

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May 15

Total a

nswers at end of d

ate

Submitted Answers (2009‐2015)

Student  ownership  over  learning  resource  

Student  familiarity  with  social  soPware  

Leveraging  student  energy  and  creaFvity  

Why  student  authored  ques7ons?  

•  A  student  contribu7ng  a  new  ques7on  would  develop  the  ques7on  stem:  

QuesFon  

Student  authored  ques7on  HUBS192,  2010  

University  of  Otago  

Why  student  authored  ques7ons?  AlternaFves  

•  And  a  set  of  plausible  alterna7ves  

•  Of  course,  the  correct  answer  must  be  indicated  

Why  student  authored  ques7ons?  AlternaFves  

•  And  a  set  of  plausible  alterna7ves  

•  Of  course,  the  correct  answer  must  be  indicated  

Why  student  authored  ques7ons?  ExplanaFon  

•  And  an  explana7on,  in  their  own  words  

•  Useful  for  students  who  answer  incorrectly  

“You  don't  really  understand  how  much  or  how  li5le  you  know  about  a  concept  un9l  you  try  to  devise  a  good,  original  ques9on  about  it”    “The  aspect  I  found  truly  useful  was  the  crea9on  of  ques9ons,  which  reinforced  much  of  [my]  understanding  while  also  ac9vely  making  me  clarify  and  solidify  my  thought  processes  (especially  the  explana9on  parts)”  

Why  student  authored  ques7ons?  

Student  feedback  

Badges   Points   Leaderboards  

2)    Hands-­‐on  session  

student  generated  content  for  enhanced  engagement  and  learning  

Your  turn:                open  a  new  window  in  your  browser  

Google:  peerwise  Start  typing:  Bri5sh  Columbia…...  

hVp://bit.ly/pwntu  

Or  go  direct  to  the  URL:  

Registra7on  

Step  1  –  choose  a  name  

Our  recommendaFon:    please  use  your  first  iniFal  and  your  surname  (e.g.  sbates)  

Step  2  –  enter  a  password  

Step  3  –  enter  the  Course  ID  

11498  

Step  4  –  enter  your  Iden7fier  

Any  3-­‐digit  number  between    

100  and  500  

That’s  it!  

now  log  in…  

Choose  the  “NTU2015  example”  course  

1)  Your  ques7ons:  “view”  

2)  Create  new  ques7on  

3)  Preview  

4)  “Make  changes”  or  “Save  ques7on”  

CreaFng  a  quesFon  

1)  Unanswered  ques7ons:  “view”  

2)  Choose  ques7on  

3)  Select  answer  

Answering  quesFons  

3)    Research  highlights  

student  generated  content  for  enhanced  engagement  and  learning  

Research  highlights  

•  Rela7onship  between  ac7vity  and  performance  

•  The  quality  of  student-­‐authored  ques7ons  •  Influencing  student  behaviour  with  rewards  

Ac7vity  and  learning  

•  Generally,  students:  – Par7cipate  beyond  minimum  requirements  – Engage  in  community  learning,  correc7ng  errors  – Create  problems,  not  exercises  – Provide  posi7ve  feedback  

Correla7on  with  end  of  course  outcomes  

Correla7on  with  end  of  course  outcomes  

Correla7on  with  end  of  course  outcomes  

Ques7on  quality  

Comprehensive  categorisa7on  of  >50%  of  repository  for  two  successive  academic  years    Principal  measures  to  define  a  ‘high  quality  ques7on’  

 -­‐  cogni7ve  level  of  ques7on    -­‐  explana7on  quality    -­‐  other  binary  criteria  

Category Description 6 Create (synthesise ideas) 5 Assess 4 Analyse (multi-step) 3 Apply (1-step calcs.) 2 Understand 1 Remember

Cogni7ve  level  of  ques7on  

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Taxonomic Category

Perc

enta

ge o

f Sub

mitt

ed Q

uest

ions

First semester N = 350

Second semester N = 252

Results: Question level Physics 1A / 1B 2011

•  Badge  /  achievement  system  •  Randomised  controlled  trial  (n  >  1000)  

Authoring  ques7ons   Evalua7ng  ques7ons  

Answering  ques7ons   Other  

Do  rewards  work?  

No  difference  between  groups  with  respect  to  answer  correctness  

+  13%  +  22%  

DistribuFon  of  days  of  acFvity  differs  significantly  between  groups:  p  <  0.001  DistribuFon  of  answers  per  student  differs  significantly  between  groups:  p  <  0.001  

Implica7ons  

•  Badges  can  have  a  measurable  posi7ve  impact  on  some  student  ac7ons  

•  No  nega7ve  effects  on  ac7vity  or  percep7ons:  a  low-­‐risk  proposi7on  

Please  join  us!  hVp://www.peerwise-­‐community.org/  

These  slides  hVp://bit.ly/batestalks  

4)    Q  &  A  

student  generated  content  for  enhanced  engagement  and  learning  

Publica7ons  “Student-­‐generated  content:  using  PeerWise  to  enhance  engagement  and  outcomes  in  introductory  physics  courses”    (S.  P.  Bates,  R.  K.  Galloway,  K.  L.  McBride),  In  2011  Physics  Educa7on  Research  Conference  (NS  Rebello,  PV  Engelhardt,  C  Singh,  eds.),  Amer.  Inst.  Physics,  volume  1413,  2012.  (Physics  Educa7on  Research  Conference,  Omaha,  NE,  2011)      “Student-­‐generated  content:  Enhancing  learning  through  sharing  mulFple-­‐choice  quesFons”    (J.  A.  Hardy,  S.  P.  Bates,  M.  M.  Casey,  K.  W.  Galloway,    R.  K.  Galloway,  A.  E.  Kay,  P.  Kirsop,  &  H.  A.  McQueen)  Interna7onal  Journal  of  Science  Educa7on  (2014)  1-­‐15    “Assessing  the  quality  of  a  student-­‐generated  quesFon  repository”  (S.  P.  Bates,  R.  K.  Galloway,  J.  Riise,  and  D.  Homer)  Physical  Review  Special  Topics:PER  (2014)  10,  020105    “The  Effect  of  Virtual  Achievements  on  Student  Engagement”    (P.  Denny),  In  Proceedings  of  the  SIGCHI  Conference  on  Human  Factors  in  Compu7ng  Systems  (CHI  '13),  pp  763-­‐772.  ACM,  2013.  

Acknowledgements  These  slides  were  based  on  an  online  workshop  at  the  Western  Conference  on  Science  Educa7on,  London  Ontario  in  Summer  2013.