Wednesday, September 12, 2012

A Not-At-All Comprehensive Review of Socrative

At the start of the school year, our Assistant Principal introduced me to a student clicker-type program called Socrative. It's free and can be used in your web browser or downloaded as an app to a mobile device (available for iOS and Android devices).

I've been testing this out in my class for the past couple of weeks and have been rather impressed by the results.

There are essentially two modes for using Socrative: you can administer a pre-written quiz to your students with multiple-choice questions and free response questions, or you can administer a quick one-question activity on the fly.

I've been using the pre-built quiz feature for the past few days as a warm-up activity for my students when they get to my classroom. Students log on to their desktop computers (or sign on to Socrative on their smartphones) and complete a question related to the current skill they are working on.

I was asked to demonstrate Socrative to my colleagues at today's staff meeting, so I wrote a sample quiz for them. Here was one of the multiple-choice questions:


You can set the quiz to give instant feedback when an answer is selected. In this case, the answer was obviously "ninjas."


Now, while students are taking the quiz, the teacher can use their end of the software to monitor progress and results in real time:


 Free-response questions can also be built into a Socrative quiz. Here's an example from the quiz from the staff meeting:


Now, obviously I use this in a far more practical manner in the classroom. (That's not to say that questions about ninjas and ice cream aren't important, BECAUSE THEY ARE.) For instance, here is the warm-up question I administered to my students this morning:


Now, here's the really cool part.

When I see that the students have finished, I end the activity. Then, I am presented with the option to e-mail a report to myself.


So this morning when my students finished their warm-up question, I had a report e-mailed to me. A few minutes later, this arrived in my inbox (student names have been removed):




Formative performance data that can inform and drive my classroom instruction to best meet the needs of my students?  All organized and color-coded in an Excel spreadsheet? And this software is free? HOLY CRAP. YES PLEASE.

But wait! There's more!


If you don't have time to write a quiz in Socrative, that's no problem at all. Socrative also allows for a quick one-question option that allows you to assess students on the fly.

On the teacher control panel, you can choose to start a quick multiple choice, true/false, or short answer activity:


You can announce the question orally, or provide it in a written format on paper, dry erase board, online LMS, napkin, ankle tattoo, whatever. Say you wanted to do a true/false question. You select this option, and the students see this on their screen:





Notice that there's no question displayed. As I mentioned, it's up to you to present the question however you want. The point is that you can use Socrative on the fly to formatively assess your students as well. You can also monitor results in real time, though there won't be names attached (so this is also good for taking an anonymous poll). The downside, however, is that you can't e-mail a report to yourself in this mode.

So far, I'm seeing great advantages to using Socrative in my classroom. It's a very handy way for me to quickly collect and organize formative assessment data before, during, and after a lesson. It allows me to more effectively monitor my students' learning and to make appropriate instructional decisions. And, since Socrative can be downloaded as an app to mobile devices, it's also conducive to a BYOT classroom environment.

Probably the one thing I really wish Socrative could do is recognize math type. In the slope question above, I had to settle for typing "1/3" and "5/6" instead of putting them into a less-confusing vertical format. There's also no way to insert charts, graphs, tables, etc. There are ways to get around this, of course. (I can post the full question in another medium that supports math-type and have the students submit their responses via Socrative.) Still, it would be convenient to have these features present. (EDIT 8/22/2013: In the past year since this post was written, Socrative has added the ability to post images. This provides another way around the issue. Sweet!)

Overall, this is a great piece of software and is a very simple way of recording formative assessment data. Works great in a 1:1 technology environment, provides real-time results, and supports data-driven instructional practice. I give it four out of five ninjas.

RATING:

(Trust me, there are four ninjas next to "RATING:" here. You can't see them, because they're ninjas.)




10 comments:

  1. Socrative doesn't handle math symbols used in more advanced math like exponents and more complex fractions in standard form (vertical).

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  2. @Douglas Miller. You are correct, it does have its downfall in that area. I create my quizzes on my iPad and draw comprehensive math fraction questions and all of the four possible solutions in the one picture. I then upload that image as the whole question. It is not the best, but it is a solution if you don't have enough funds to get an institutional license to Learning Catalytics (the best one that I have used, only for 6 mths however).

    http://mrverbruggen.blogspot.com.au/

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  3. You could of course print screen an image of a maths question created in Notebook or whatever, and insert it as in image in your question. That should get around symbols etc.

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    1. That's true! The feature was not yet available when I wrote this, but that does certainly add a degree of flexibility. I love it.

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  4. In my class we tested Socrative over the past few days. It worked well the other day - we did about 20 single-question activities. Today, however, students had problems using Socrative on their iPads. About 3 or 4 out of 10 students got black screen when they visited m.socrative.com in Safari or when they were using the app. With the other 6 or 7 students it worked fine.

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  5. I wonder how responsive Socrative is. I plan on using it in classes with 60 or more students, where I want it to be both, attendance check and verify students' understanding. Will Socrative easily handle the response from 60 students? If a student has connection trouble, (what kind of trouble can I expect?), then what is best to do?

    It is embarrassing when it does not work for some students....

    R.

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  6. Easy way to get math symbols into socrative quiz: go to http://math.typeit.org/ type in yuour problem, then copy and paste into socrative. No need to upload a photo. I realize this blog is a few years old, but thought it might be helpful to some. Jeff, thanks for creating this blog, it's both entertaining and helpful.

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    1. It was helpful to me. However, I am looking for an automatic way, like latex.If some quiz would accept csv files with latex formulas, it would be magic. I want to create (using a programming language, here Python) automatic lists of questions/answers that would be fed to some program like Socrative (or Quizizz, or Kahoot).
      So if anybody has any clue for me, I would be grateful, and could share the programs of course.

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    2. Late to the party here, but if you have used Plickers, it uses a piece of paper as the response system, but you can use a Tampermonkey script (in Chrome) to allow you to use Latex to use math coding.

      It may be extensible to something like Kahoot, though I haven't tried it with Kahoot yet. It might need some changes to the script, and quite honestly, I don't know much scripting language.

      https://github.com/obook/TeXify-Plickers

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