EIT: Earnest Insight Toolkit for Evaluating Students’ Earnestness in Interactive Lecture Participation Exercises
In today’s rapidly evolving educational landscape, traditional modes of passive information delivery are giving way to transformative pedagogical approaches that prioritize active student engagement. Within the context of large-scale hybrid classrooms, the challenge lies in fostering meaningful and active interaction between students and course content. This study delves into the significance of measuring students’ earnestness during interactive lecture participation exercises. By analyzing students’ responses to interactive lecture poll questions, establishing a clear rubric for evaluating earnestness, and conducting a comprehensive assessment, we introduce EIT (Earnest Insight Toolkit), a tool designed to assess students’ engagement within interactive lecture participation exercises—particularly in the context of large-scale hybrid classrooms. Through the utilization of EIT, our objective is to equip educators with valuable means of identifying at-risk students for enhancing intervention and support strategies, as well as measuring students’ levels of engagement with course content.
Thu 21 MarDisplayed time zone: Pacific Time (US & Canada) change
15:45 - 17:00 | Pedagogy - Flexible ModalitiesPapers at Meeting Room E145 Chair(s): Jesse Ha Montclair State University | ||
15:45 25mTalk | Do Behavioral Factors Influence the Extent to which Students Engage with Formative Practice Opportunities? Papers Ashish Aggarwal University of Florida, Manas Adepu University of Florida, Alex Garcia-Marin University of Florida, Christina Gardner-McCune Herbert Wertheim College of Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA DOI | ||
16:10 25mTalk | EIT: Earnest Insight Toolkit for Evaluating Students’ Earnestness in Interactive Lecture Participation Exercises Papers Mihran Miroyan UC Berkeley, Shiny Weng UC Berkeley, Rahul Shah UC Berkeley, Lisa Yan University of California, Berkeley, Narges Norouzi University of California, Berkeley DOI | ||
16:35 25mTalk | Traditional vs. Flexible Modalities in a Data Structures Class Papers Shanon Reckinger University of Illinois at Chicago, Joe Hummel Northwestern University, Sarah Heckman North Carolina State University DOI |