Transcript Document

The Classroom Presenter
Project
Richard Anderson
University of Washington
Tablet PCs in the Classroom



Instructor Presentation
Student Note Taking
Classroom Interaction



Student engagement
Feedback to the instructor
Student contribution to discussion
Instructor Presentation
Student Applications
Brief Intro to Classroom
Presenter


Tablet PC based presentation system
Distributed system




Remote presentations
Classroom Interaction
University of Washington research
project
Built on top of ConferenceXP research
platform
Find out about audience
Background Questionnaire

Who are you?





University Level Teacher
K-12 Teacher
Instructional Technologist
Industry
Other
Do you have Tablets?

Do you have a collection of Tablet PCs?




No
Yes, HP Tablets
Yes, other Tablets
If yes, how are you using the Tablets?



In the classroom, in a lecture setting
In the classroom, but not in a lecture setting
Out of the classroom
Main interest

Explore Tablet PC based Classroom
Pedagogy



Enhance traditional lecture
My experience – University Level,
Computer Science Courses
Technology should apply just as well to
other levels and other disciplines
Technology Vision



Wireless Classroom
Interaction of Devices
Deployment scenario



Primarily Student Owned Devices
But for now – classroom devices
Concentrate on Tablets


Unique affordances
I’m still betting on Tablets
Classroom Presenter
Introduction



Presentation Tool – Ink and slides
Distributed System
Classroom Interaction
Presentation Tool



Digital Ink and
electronic slides
Direct projection
from tablet
Lecture oriented
features



Minimize slide
Whiteboard
Instructor Notes
Distributed System


Synchronized display
across multiple
machines
Separate projector
machine



Distance education
Untethered presenter
Student devices

Integrated note
taking
Classroom Interaction


Students send ink back to the instructor
Student submissions scenario



Exercise posed on slides
Students write answer on slide and send it
back to the instructor
Instructor selectively displays student
answers on public display
Classroom Interaction
Classroom Presenter Project








Fall 2001, DISC Project, Microsoft Research
Spring 2002, UW PMP Class
Fall 2002, Presentation Application, UW
Summer 2003, Major software development
Fall 2003, Classroom Interaction Pilot, USD
2004, Studies of Ink in Presentation
Winter, Spring 2005, Classroom Interaction
Pilots, UW
Summer 2005, Development begins on CP 3.0
Classroom Deployments





University of
Washington courses
Computer Science
Undergraduate courses
Usually 15 to 20 tablet
pcs
Wireless environment
Instructor supplied
tablets







Software Engineering
Digital Design
Data Structures
Algorithms
Tablet PC Project
Course
CS Education Seminar
Fourth grade math
Classroom deployments

Use of shared tablets


2-3 tablets per students
Promote student discussion and group
work
Classroom Pedagogy

Active learning
Classroom assessment
Discussion around student artifacts

Learner centric design


What is special about Ink?



Derivational activities as opposed to selection
Unanticipated solutions, misconceptions
Flexibility of domains





Symbolic domains
Diagrams
Annotation of existing content
Partial results, brainstorming, scratch work
Expression of individuality
What is special about Digital
ink?




Logistics
Capture and replay
Integration with lecture materials
Anonymous
Impact on instruction



Classroom experience is different
Less material is covered
Radical change in lecture preparation



Learning goals first!
Developing pedagogy and resources for
this style of teaching will take time
Mix technology supported instruction
with conventional lecture
Classroom Presenter Futures

Classroom Presenter 2.0 released
September 2005


2.1 will be released in Winter 2006
Development of CP 3.0 underway


Improved ink performance
Enable future extensions of Presenter
Challenges of Classroom
Networking


Broadcast networking is a surprising
challenge
We generally use ad hoc networking


But sometimes rely on access points
Issues arise with particular
hardware/software/driver configurations
Classroom Examples
Digital Design / Data
structures
Fitt’s law / Geometry
Software Engineering
Elementary school math
Preliminary Results

Positive Student Responses

Digital Design Survey (1-5 scale)




Impact on learning
Value of seeing solutions displayed
Recommend to other instructors
High rate of student participation
4.4
4.3
4.1
Invitation




I’m looking for several faculty members
interested in using Classroom Presenter
with student devices
Requirement: Availability of Tablet PCs
and networking support
Any course level or discipline
Interested: send mail to
[email protected]
CLASSROOM PRESENTER
www.cs.washington.edu/education/dl/presenter
For more information, contact
Richard Anderson
[email protected]
CONFERENCE XP
www.conferencexp.net
For more information, contact
Chris Moffatt
[email protected]