I use a student response system in my classroom (iClicker) for low-stakes quizzes and for ungraded questions that give me a sense of what my students are getting and what’s still a little fuzzy. If your institution doesn’t have funds to support this technology, or if you’re not sure you’d use it enough to make it worth the expense, consider trying Poll Everywhere. Poll Everywhere uses your students’ cell phones as ‘clickers.’ All you need is a live internet connection in your classroom. Cost: If you choose ‘higher education’ you can collect up to 32 responses per question for free. If you would like moreRead More →

On one of the teaching listservs I’m subscribed to, participants were having their periodic row over using PowerPoint versus not using PowerPoint. But this time, rather than simply defending themselves, the PowerPoint users went on the attack noting that using the whiteboard was not exactly the idyllic world the non-PowerPoint users were making it out to be. Whiteboard markers, they argued, were often dried up, and colors other than black weren’t bright enough to see. Throwing away all that plastic is bad for the environment. And they stink! Literally. While I enjoy my pixels, I’m not opposed to writing on a whiteboard. In fact, sometimesRead More →

Prezi is (free for educational use) web-based presentation software that allows you to create a map of your presentation instead of using slides. You can make your presentations public or private; you can download them for offline use if you’d like.  Prezis can be embedded in a webpage.  Give the link to your laptop wielding students, and they can step through your presentation with you during class.  I haven’t tried it, but you should be able to embed Prezis on a page inside your course management system (e.g., Angel, Blackboard).   If you don’t want your students to have everything you’re showing in class, create aRead More →

One of the most common complaints I hear about PowerPoint is that it is linear; when you run your PowerPoint, you’re locked into running it in the order in which you created it. This is simply not true. “Presenter view” must be the most underused of the most useful PowerPoint features. All you need is a computer that can give you an ‘extended desktop,’ which is almost all laptops and most desktop computers made in the last few years. This is what is displayed through the projector. But this is what I see on my computer monitor: PowerPoint treats the projector as an ‘extended desktop.’Read More →

Classroom Presenter is the coolest thing that’s happened to my teaching since I got a computer in my classroom. If all it did was allow me to present slides in a way that’s a whole lot easier than PowerPoint, it’d be worth it. This is what is displayed to the students in class through the projector. And this is what I see on my TabletPC. Classroom Presenter runs PPT slides, so I don’t have to do a lot to transition to this program.  (I do have to do a few things; see below.) To navigate I just tap on the slide I want.  As myRead More →