Clicking for the Success of all Students: A Literature Review and Classroom Study Investigating the Possible Differential Impact of Clickers

abstract: Clickers are a common part of many classrooms across universities. Despite the widespread use, education researchers disagree about how to best use these tools and about how they impact students. Prior work has shown possible differential impacts of clickers based on demographic indicators...

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Other Authors: Chambers, Elijah Lorenzo (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62771
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-627712020-12-09T05:00:40Z Clicking for the Success of all Students: A Literature Review and Classroom Study Investigating the Possible Differential Impact of Clickers abstract: Clickers are a common part of many classrooms across universities. Despite the widespread use, education researchers disagree about how to best use these tools and about how they impact students. Prior work has shown possible differential impacts of clickers based on demographic indicators, such as age, gender, and ethnicity. To explore these topics a two-part project was designed. First, a literature review was completed focusing on past and current clicker practices and the research surrounding them. Second, original data, stratified by demographic characteristics, was collected on student perceptions of clickers. The literature review revealed that not all uses of clickers are created equal. Instructors in higher education first introduced clickers to enhance traditional pedagogies by simplifying common classroom tasks (e.g. grading, attendance, feedback collection). More recently, instructors pair clickers and novel pedagogies. A review of the identified benefits and drawbacks for students and instructors is provided for both approaches. Instructors can use different combinations of technological competency and pedagogical content knowledge that lead to four main outcomes. When instructors have both technological competency and pedagogical content knowledge, all the involved parties, students and instructors, benefit. When instructors have technological competency but lack pedagogical content knowledge, instructors are the main benefactors. When instructors have pedagogical content knowledge alone, students can benefit, but usefulness to the instructor decreases. When instructors have neither technological competency nor pedagogical content knowledge, no party benefits. Beyond these findings, recommendations are provided for future clicker research. Second, the review highlighted that clickers may have a differential impact on students of different demographic groups. To explore this dynamic, an original study on student views of clickers, which included demographic data, was conducted. The original study does not find significantly different enthusiasm for clickers by demographic group, unlike prior studies that explored some of these relationships. However, white students and male students are overrepresented in the group that does not enjoy clickers. This conclusion is supported by visual observations from the means of the demographic groups. Overall, based on the review of the literature and original research, if instructors pair clickers with validated pedagogies, and if researchers continue to study clicker classrooms, including which students like and benefit from clickers, clickers may continue to be a valuable educational technology. Dissertation/Thesis Chambers, Elijah Lorenzo (Author) Henderson, Joesph (Advisor) Ellison, Karin (Advisor) Chew, Matthew (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Educational technology Instructional design Science education Active Learning Classroom Response Systems Clickers Inclusive learning Interactive learning Student Discussion eng 118 pages Masters Thesis Biology 2020 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62771 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Educational technology
Instructional design
Science education
Active Learning
Classroom Response Systems
Clickers
Inclusive learning
Interactive learning
Student Discussion
spellingShingle Educational technology
Instructional design
Science education
Active Learning
Classroom Response Systems
Clickers
Inclusive learning
Interactive learning
Student Discussion
Clicking for the Success of all Students: A Literature Review and Classroom Study Investigating the Possible Differential Impact of Clickers
description abstract: Clickers are a common part of many classrooms across universities. Despite the widespread use, education researchers disagree about how to best use these tools and about how they impact students. Prior work has shown possible differential impacts of clickers based on demographic indicators, such as age, gender, and ethnicity. To explore these topics a two-part project was designed. First, a literature review was completed focusing on past and current clicker practices and the research surrounding them. Second, original data, stratified by demographic characteristics, was collected on student perceptions of clickers. The literature review revealed that not all uses of clickers are created equal. Instructors in higher education first introduced clickers to enhance traditional pedagogies by simplifying common classroom tasks (e.g. grading, attendance, feedback collection). More recently, instructors pair clickers and novel pedagogies. A review of the identified benefits and drawbacks for students and instructors is provided for both approaches. Instructors can use different combinations of technological competency and pedagogical content knowledge that lead to four main outcomes. When instructors have both technological competency and pedagogical content knowledge, all the involved parties, students and instructors, benefit. When instructors have technological competency but lack pedagogical content knowledge, instructors are the main benefactors. When instructors have pedagogical content knowledge alone, students can benefit, but usefulness to the instructor decreases. When instructors have neither technological competency nor pedagogical content knowledge, no party benefits. Beyond these findings, recommendations are provided for future clicker research. Second, the review highlighted that clickers may have a differential impact on students of different demographic groups. To explore this dynamic, an original study on student views of clickers, which included demographic data, was conducted. The original study does not find significantly different enthusiasm for clickers by demographic group, unlike prior studies that explored some of these relationships. However, white students and male students are overrepresented in the group that does not enjoy clickers. This conclusion is supported by visual observations from the means of the demographic groups. Overall, based on the review of the literature and original research, if instructors pair clickers with validated pedagogies, and if researchers continue to study clicker classrooms, including which students like and benefit from clickers, clickers may continue to be a valuable educational technology. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Biology 2020
author2 Chambers, Elijah Lorenzo (Author)
author_facet Chambers, Elijah Lorenzo (Author)
title Clicking for the Success of all Students: A Literature Review and Classroom Study Investigating the Possible Differential Impact of Clickers
title_short Clicking for the Success of all Students: A Literature Review and Classroom Study Investigating the Possible Differential Impact of Clickers
title_full Clicking for the Success of all Students: A Literature Review and Classroom Study Investigating the Possible Differential Impact of Clickers
title_fullStr Clicking for the Success of all Students: A Literature Review and Classroom Study Investigating the Possible Differential Impact of Clickers
title_full_unstemmed Clicking for the Success of all Students: A Literature Review and Classroom Study Investigating the Possible Differential Impact of Clickers
title_sort clicking for the success of all students: a literature review and classroom study investigating the possible differential impact of clickers
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62771
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