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Types of Questions to Ask
Many instructors see
multiple-choice questions as limited to testing
students’ recall of facts. However, multiple-choice
clicker questions can actually serve many other purposes
in the class, including assessing students’ higher-order
thinking skills. Since clicker questions can be used not
only to assess students but to engage them, some very
effective clicker questions are quite different than
multiple-choice questions that might appear on exams.
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- Recall Questions:
These questions ask students to recall facts,
concepts, or techniques relevant to class. They are
often used to see if students did the reading,
remember important points from prior classes, or
have memorized key facts. They rarely generate
discussion, however, and don’t require higher-order
thinking skills.
- Conceptual Understanding
Questions:
These questions go beyond recall
and assess students’ understanding of important
concepts. Answer choices to these questions are
often based on common student misconceptions, and so
these questions work well to help instructors
identify and address their students’ misconceptions.
Questions asking students to classify examples,
match characteristics with concepts, select the best
explanation for a concept, or translate among
different ways of representing an idea are examples
of conceptual understanding questions.
- Application Questions:
These questions require students to apply
their knowledge and understanding to particular
situations and contexts. Application questions often
ask students to make a decision or choice in a given
scenario, connect course content to “real-world”
situations, implement procedures or techniques, or
predict the outcome of experiments or even their
peers’ response to a subsequent question.
- Critical Thinking
Questions: These questions operate at the
higher levels of
Bloom’s Taxonomy, requiring students to analyze
relationships among multiple concepts or make
evaluations based on particular criteria. Often
these questions are “one-best-answer questions,”
questions that include multiple answer choices that
have merit. Students are asked to select the one
best answer from these choices. One-best-answer
questions aren’t appropriate for exams, since the
reasons students provide for or against answer
choices are of more interest than their particular
answer selections. However, these questions can be
very effective in preparing students to engage in
class discussions about their reasons.
- Student Perspective
Questions: These are questions that ask
students to share their opinions, experiences, or
demographic information. These questions do not have
correct answers, but by surfacing the various
perspectives of students in a class, they can help
both instructors and students better understand
those perspectives. They can often generate rich
discussion, particularly questions about ethical,
legal, or moral issues. They can also help students
connect their personal experiences to more abstract
course content. The anonymity that clickers provide
is often an essential ingredient in asking these
kinds of questions.
- Confidence Level
Questions: Asking students a content
question, then following that by asking students to
rate their confidence in their answers (high,
medium, or low) can enhance the usefulness of
information on student learning provided by the
first question. Prompting students to assess their
confidence can also aid in metacognition–learning
about one’s own learning. Instructors can also ask
“predictive” confidence level questions by asking
students how confident they are that they could
correctly answer some question or accomplish some
task in which they have not yet engaged.
- Monitoring Questions:
These are questions designed to provide instructors
with information about how their students are
approaching the learning process in their courses.
For instance, one week before a paper assignment is
due, instructors might ask students whether or not
they have completed rough drafts as a way to gauge
their progress. Asking students how long they took
to complete an assignment they have just turned in
can provide instructors with useful information
about the difficulty of the assignment. Clicker
questions can also be used to see if students
remember good advice or course policies shared on a
first-day-of-class course syllabus. The questions
that appear on end-of-semester course evaluations
also make useful monitoring questions at the
midpoint of the semester.
- Classroom Experiments:
iClickers can also be used
to collect data from students for classroom
experiments often used in the social sciences. Often
data generated by students during class can be used
to make points about social behavior. By allowing
these data to be collected and analyzed during
class, clickers can bring a sense of immediacy and
relevance to these kinds of experiments.
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