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Technology and Teaching

Evaluating the Effectiveness of a Personal Response System in the Classroom

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Pages 273-277 | Published online: 13 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

We evaluated the effectiveness of the use of an electronic personal response system (or “clickers”) during an introductory psychology lecture on perceptual constancy. We graphed and projected student responses to questions during the lecture onto a large-screen display in Microsoft PowerPoint. The distributions of answers corresponded well to results found in the literature. Students rated the lecture as more interactive, interesting, and entertaining. Students in the clicker lecture also performed significantly better on exam questions concerning the lecture compared to another group of students who did not use the clickers.

Notes

aResponses were compared to a rating of 3 (not sure)

bResponses were compared to a rating of 1 (not helpful at all).

p < .001.

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