As I mentioned in an earlier post, my students will often be required to submit Jing videos of their worked solutions to a variety of problems. Basically it’s the modern alternative to handing in paper copies of their homework but I get their voice, literally & figuratively, describing the solution with all the steps in-between. I think it helps to reinforce the importance of process over final answer since they have to go to all the work of explaining what they’re doing and why, and also allows me to reinforce correct mathematical language.
When it came to providing feedback to the students, I’v
e had to rely on just an email response, describing in text or providing a full worked solution in Jing on my own. What I’d really like is what we have for paper — returning it with the markup on the product. Jing of course lets you mark up the image capture but what I need is video mark up, like they do on ESPN to describe football plays. There’s this neat little website www.markupvideo.com that does this for YouTube videos but of course, I’d like it for Jing videos (it’s all Flash anyways, eh?) Our PhysEd department has Dartfish but this seems more like LoggerPro on steroids and a bit more than what I need to mark up homework. But, we’ll give it a try …
Category Archives: Assessment
I think I want to SMAK my kids
I’ve been thinking about how to assess my Grade 9 and 10 students this year … I did a lot of experimentation last year with my accelerated Grade 8 students;they were open to trying things out since acquisition of skills and open-ended problem solving was right up their alley. Here’s one change I can make:
Image by mstephens7 via Flickr
ther than have me sit there for 10 minutes with them, guiding them through. It wouldn’t surprise me if, as they realize I’m taping them, they’ll suggest it themselves. Hopefully they’ll have seen enough examples to gauge the depth I’m looking for and the breadth of options when it comes to their explanations. We’ll see.
Is this feasible? My class size is usally about 16 kids: that’s 160 minutes x 4 = 640 minutes = 11 hours per year. That’s about the time it takes to mark a set of exams but spread across the whole year. Times three classes, of course.
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