Is Texting for Class Questions a Good Idea?

In summary, this summarizer believes that providing an interface where students can send questions electronically to the professor during the lecture is a good idea, as it allows for more immediate feedback and avoids the potential distraction of students using cell phones or laptops during class. However, the summarizer thinks that this idea would be most effective if it were introduced in a low-key way and if students are willing to speak up with their questions.
  • #1
Scott Hill
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I had an interesting idea in a dream, and unlike most dream ideas it still made sense when I woke up. When I'm teaching a large lecture, I know there are students who are afraid to ask questions because it feels awkward being that one voice in a hundred. My idea is to provide some sort of interface (maybe a website, or twitter, or sms) to let students send me questions electronically during the lecture. I could respond to them during class itself, or if I don't get to them I could respond to them after class. This wouldn't be in place of raising hands, but an additional channel.
What do you think?
 
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  • #2
If you aren't getting feedback firsthand from a "large" group, an extra channel is NOT going to help.
 
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  • #3
If the students can't speak up with their question, then they can come to office hours to ask them. That's my take on it. This is essentially encouraging them to distract themselves during class.
 
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  • #4
I think it would be worth a shot. There are website already available which will allow you to easily do this, though I can't remember the names of any right now. Twitter might work. One drawback is students having their smartphones out is another distraction for them; on the other hand, if you find that many of your students find it impossible to not use their phones during class, it's a way to take advantage of that and focus their attention on the material.
 
  • #5
I agree with Bystander and QuantumCurt. Class time is for presentation and discussion of the material being taught. Cell phone, smart phones, and any internet/web-based interaction tool are modern fashion which could be used more fittingly outside of class time.
 
  • #6
I suppose the answer depends strongly on the broader question of how one feels about laptops and cell phones in the classroom. Personally, I only worry about them if they disrupt other students. I know that if I walk into class some day and say, for instance, that I've just posted their exam grades online, then a good portion of them will have looked up their grades before the end of class.

Recently I've written a little AJAX chat plugin for my class website so students can chat with me without signing up for any particular service. I intended it for after-class use, but if I mention in a low-key way that students can use it during class too, and keep the interface open, it would be interesting to see if it gets used.
 
  • #7
Here's a site you might want to look into: https://www.polleverywhere.com. I seem to recall hearing about another site which might be a bit more geared to what you're looking for, but I can't remember what it was called.
 
  • #8
I think it's a great idea. Give it a try and let us know how it goes.

One other thing that may end up happening -- you could get quiet corrections to misspoken items in your lecture -- I know that back in the day there were plent of times that my lecturer made verbal "typos" in their lecture, and I was conflicted in whether to raise my hand to correct them. On one hand it's disruptive to correct these verbal typos, but on the other hand they can confuse many students if not corrected quickly. If you had a monitor easily visible where you were checking it as time allowed, that could provide an easy and non-disruptive way to fix verbal typos in a timely manner.

I know that the PF Mentors are dealing with the Mobile Age quite a bit in how we handle for forums now, and staying ahead of the curve with good, practical ideas will likely be a key going forward. :smile:
 
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  • #9
Bystander said:
If you aren't getting feedback firsthand from a "large" group, an extra channel is NOT going to help.
Fortunately, I do get a good number of students who are willing to talk to me during class, and I would hate to lose that. But I know that I'm not hearing from everyone, and there are going to be students who are too timid to speak up.
QuantumCurt said:
If the students can't speak up with their question, then they can come to office hours to ask them. That's my take on it. This is essentially encouraging them to distract themselves during class.
I know firsthand the allure of the web and the potential for distraction, but I'm not sure how much this will add to the general background level of distraction, if you get my meaning. And I like to get students' questions as soon as they come up; I think that's one of the prime benefits of a live class over a book or a video. Instant feedback. And I would choose a system where, if I can't answer their questions in class, I can get back to them later on.
 
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  • #10
Scott Hill said:
students who are too timid to speak up.
Depends on how adept/averse you are at/to multi-tasking, and how adaptable you feel. "Wallflower" participation? Training motivated people interactively anywhere from twice a day to once every couple weeks is NOT the same as teaching in a lecture hall so, this should be taken with a 50# livestock block --- zero --- if you have to hold their hands to lead them across life's streets, get used to it --- they aren't ever going to take chances of being noticed for good or ill.
 
  • #11
Bystander said:
"Wallflower" participation? …they aren't ever going to take chances of being noticed for good or ill.
I disagree with your characterization of this as hand-holding, or the suggestion that students who can't speak up in class are unable to take risks in other ways, or to succeed in academia. But I don't think an argument over it would be very fruitful, so I'll leave it at that. :)
 
  • #12
I agree with others here that it would just distract students more. They get their phones out to ask a question, and oh look they have a text, and a Facebook notification...

What one of my professors did which I think was good was to have an online chat session for an hour every couple of days in addition to office hours. That way he wouldn't even have to know who the student was that was asking the question, and the student would feel more comfortable than going to office hours.
 
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  • #13
Scott Hill said:
I had an interesting idea in a dream, and unlike most dream ideas it still made sense when I woke up. When I'm teaching a large lecture, I know there are students who are afraid to ask questions because it feels awkward being that one voice in a hundred. My idea is to provide some sort of interface (maybe a website, or twitter, or sms) to let students send me questions electronically during the lecture. I could respond to them during class itself, or if I don't get to them I could respond to them after class. This wouldn't be in place of raising hands, but an additional channel.
What do you think?

Late to the discussion- I'm intrigued by the idea, but unclear how it would actually work. I imagine a substantial fraction of the questions would consist of little more than "Ugh! I'm so confused!" (assuming you don't have a steady stream of random unhelpful comments like "why do we need to know this?" or a twitter-like feed of rudeness).

I (and my colleagues) also struggle with getting students to be engaged in class. There are lots of strategies ('classroom participation" as part of the grade, directly asking students questions, clickers, in-class group work, etc. etc), but the problem remains stubbornly resistant to solution. The online chat idea is good, if you are able to schedule the time.
 
  • #14
This is part of a much bigger issue, how does a one-to-many broadcaster such as a teacher/lecturer get feedback via the many-to-one channel. Many, many methods have been tried, and success is variable. In terms of passive students, who may actually harbour good questions, anonymity helps. This also has drawbacks for the teacher.

My own favourite effect of this mechanism is the Enron Scandal Documentary, where Ken Lay accepts and then proceeds to read anonymous questions from his audience:

[EDIT: I am unable to paste in the time point. It's at 1 hour 33 mins and 10 seconds into the video]
 
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  • #15
Unless the student is adapted at multitasking, the time spent while texting you a question will be time when he/she will not be paying attention to what you are saying in class.

I'm all for exploring new technologies at improving education, but letting students text you during class is not something I see as being a solution. If a student is too shy or do not want to ask you in class, there's always office hours, and there's always the ability to write to you an e-mail AFTER class.

Zz.
 
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  • #16
stabu said:
[EDIT: I am unable to paste in the time point. It's at 1 hour 33 mins and 10 seconds into the video]
I can't even play it !?

Blocked.JPG
 
  • #17
i like the idea - maybe tweet questions.

I saw a report a while ago about a school that separated boys and girls in science class (below age 16 the girls are much better than the boys at science);

after the separation, the boys scores went up; and the thinking was, that when with the girls they didn't want to lose face by either looking like a swot or an idiot, and the result was to keep quiet and not understand...

so, yes, good idea; but as others point out implementing it so as not to make it a distraction is another thing...it will be interesting.

The internet and mobile communications is changing, and will continue to change, the way we teach and the way we learn. As books disappear, replaced by tablets, allowing much more interaction, maybe your idea will become commonplace.
 
  • #18
OCR: well, on YouTube some things get taken off. Maybe a text description will do?

Soon-to-be convict Ken Lay is boss of Enron before its implosion, and despite current bad news, gives a very upbeat presentation of the future of the company to a large assembly of his employees. Afterwards, he then reads out an anonymous question written on a piece paper handed up to him. It says: "Are you on crack? We don't believe you" (I'm paraphrasing).
 
  • #20
But think of all the new jobs that are being created:

https://www.higheredjobs.com/details.cfm?Jobcode=175944126&aID=565&print=yes

j/k
 
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  • #21
I think this is a terrible idea, it only encourages more passive aggressive behavior, which already becoming very prominent in today's society. People need to learn how to speak up and not be afraid of asking questions or talking in front of large groups. People also need to learn to be respectful of others and not make fun of someone for asking a "dumb" question or stuttering - and you need to make sure to reprimand whoever does this.

I feel like, although this is in good nature, it is essentially setting up people with social anxiety to fail. If everyone did this than come time when John/Jane are in the real world and they have to speak up or ask question during a conference, they'll be unable to, or even worse, won't know how to ask for help when they need it.

I would be highly agitated if I had an employee, for when I was present, never asked me for help when they had a problem, and instead waited until I was in another office to email me the question, only to have to me come back. Or again they don't ask for help at all and just act like the issue never happened.
 
  • #22
This is not the first time this has been dreamt of. Last year, I participated in a trial at my institution of a bit of software called LectureTools which offers exactly this feature, amongst many others (e.g. instant quizzes). My impression was this it had potential, though not to change the shape of the Earth or anything. This was with mature-ish students (3rd year bachelors degree) who are well used to multi-tasking i.e. they are on Facebook all the time anyway., so one more open window is no bother. It was advantageous, perhaps necessary, to have a teaching assistant on hand to process the flow of additional information, in addition to the main teacher.

My advice would be that if a class has some psycho-social feature that the teacher thinks is undesirable, then inserting technology by itself doesn't make it go away. Training small groups of students to pipe up with questions, or using peer-teaching methodologies, might well be a necessary prior step to using a second channel in the room. But if the class is prepared for it, it might work.

How about implementing it on paper first, on 3x5 index cards carried around the room? Then go for a Twitter implementation afterwards. Then you have a conceptual case for a web app.
 
  • #23
Imurhuckleberry said:
I feel like, although this is in good nature, it is essentially setting up people with social anxiety to fail. If everyone did this than come time when John/Jane are in the real world and they have to speak up or ask question during a conference, they'll be unable to, or even worse, won't know how to ask for help when they need it.

Nah, they'll just send a text/email/Facebook/tweet.

In 1998 I was working with a guy who would respond only to telephone calls. Emails or talking to him directly had no effect at all.
 
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1. Is texting for class questions a good idea for students?

It depends on the context and purpose of the texting. If it is used as a supplement to in-class discussions and to clarify misunderstandings, then it can be beneficial. However, if it is used as a replacement for participating in class or asking questions in person, it can be detrimental to learning.

2. How does texting for class questions affect the learning environment?

Texting can create a distraction in the classroom and disrupt the flow of the lesson. It can also create a sense of disconnect between the students and the teacher, as texting may not allow for immediate feedback or discussion. However, it can also be a useful tool for students who may be hesitant to speak up in class.

3. Are there any potential downsides to using texting for class questions?

One potential downside is the reliance on technology. If there are technical issues or if students do not have access to a phone or computer, they may miss out on important class discussions or information. Additionally, texting may not be appropriate for all class topics or discussions and may limit the depth of understanding that can be achieved through in-person interactions.

4. How can teachers effectively incorporate texting for class questions into their teaching?

Teachers should establish clear guidelines and expectations for texting in the classroom. They should also provide alternative methods for students to ask questions and participate in class discussions. Additionally, teachers should monitor and moderate the use of texting to ensure it is being used appropriately and not causing any disruptions.

5. What are some alternatives to texting for class questions?

Some alternatives include raising hands to ask questions, using online discussion forums, or utilizing in-class polls or surveys. It is important for teachers to explore and utilize a variety of methods to engage students and encourage participation in class discussions.

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