Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Socrative



Socrative is a cloud-based student response system developed in 2010 by Boston-based graduate school students. It allows teachers to create simple quizzes that students can take quickly on laptops, classroom tablets, or their own smartphones. This app offers an interactive environment for students and teacher to share their learning. Socrative is easy-to-use fun to implement. Teachers can ask questions, conduct polls, and conduct assessments with real-time data displaying during the session. With this app, collecting data on student understanding and ideas has never been so easy!

Users Feedback
Pros: Kids will like the instant feedback. It’s easy for teachers to see where students are missing a concept and adjust instruction accordingly. This app is a powerful and easy-to-use student-response system that has the potential to support responsive teaching. Students feel comfortable responding without peers knowing their answer. Activities can be done collaboratively. Teachers are informed of which students understand what is taught. Cons: Analyzing individual student data over time will take more time and effort than most teachers have. There is no way for peers to comment on other students work. If you lose internet connection during a test or quiz, your results will not be sent.

Using Socrative

Students access questions via a room code, and answers register immediately on the teacher's computer as the students submit their responses on almost any device. When everyone has responded, teachers can display the results using the "How did we do?" button. Teachers can create quizzes, quick questions, and exit slips that allow for multiple-choice, true/false, and one-sentence-response questions that can be graded with feedback for each student. In addition to those basic assessment strategies, students can team up to play Space Race, a collaborative activity that allows student teams to answer questions as quickly as they can; the teacher can access real-time results of this race as well as determine student teams. In addition, teachers can see quiz data and download it through an Excel sheet or email it for further planning. Check out the User Guide for more information.

Contribution to Educational Leadership
Leaders in education should train all stakeholders how to properly implement this assessment tool and allow teachers to create rich quiz-type content that engages all students through quick formative assessment questions or healthy team competitions. This tool has the capability to align each question to a Common Core standards. You can measure student learning with printable reports and view long term data of students over time. It's a great tool to assess learning in the moment or spark conversation because there's so much flexibility in how teachers structure questions, answers, and explanations.

Personal Analysis

This app is awesome! It can be used at any grade level with all subject matter. It produces high engagement through whole class participation and real-time formative assessment data. Socrative is simple and flexible, and most importantly, it works on almost any web or app-enabled device. There are countless resources for students and educators as well. Teachers can adjust settings so that students can see percentages on the screen instead of individual responses. This encourages students who may be reluctant to respond to participate digitally and anonymously. Students responses are collected and displayed on the classroom screen or they can be emailed to the teacher. There are also pre-designed activities to choose from along with exit tickets to check student understanding. Questions that are created can be accessed in the future. Using Socrative fosters effective communication skills by encouraging students to think critically and debate answers in a respectful and meaningful way.

Download Socrative Student App and check it out for yourself!

References
Socrative by MasteryConnect. (2015) Retrieved January 28, 2019, from http://www.socrative.com/index.php.

Maimon, L. (2016) Eberly Center for Teaching Excellence and Educational Innovation. What is the difference between formative and summative assessment? Retrieved January 28, 2019, from www.cmu.edu/teaching/assessment/basics/formative-summative.html.

Socrative App User Guide, Retrieved January 28, 2019, from http://socrative.com/materials/SocrativeUserGuide.pdf.