The easiest and most entertaining way to collect feedback from your audience:
Project polls or message boards on a large screen, have everyone send their input via their cell phones and see results instantly!
"Engage Audiences
Keeps audiences involved by asking open-ended questions and running ad hoc polls. Present the same slides you were going to use anyways!
Get Feedback
Receive honest, anonymous feedback from people you really care about. Ask audiences to enter their email address via the mobile device they participated with.
Present Anywhere
Do presentations anywhere -- there's no need for a large screen! Leave a copy of your slides on participants' devices, including your contact information."
Useful tool lets you upload PowerPoint or Keynote presentations and then share as a link. You can then insert polls or questions and get real-time feedback from students/viewers.
More teachers are equipping their classrooms with little keypads — often called clickers — that let students instantly, and anonymously, answer questions. Teachers say the clickers are improving the quality of education by measuring how engaged students are in the material they are learning.
More teachers are equipping their classrooms with little keypads — often called clickers — that let students instantly, and anonymously, answer questions. Teachers say the clickers are improving the quality of education by measuring how engaged students are in the material they are learning.
newer clicker models even allow for open-ended responses beyond multiple choice.
More teachers are equipping their classrooms with little keypads - often called clickers - that let students instantly, and anonymously, answer questions. Teachers say the clickers are improving the quality of education by measuring how engaged students are in the material they are learning.
We spent a lot of time talking about their digital footprint and that what they do can be tracked
One of the most common uses is to turn the phone into a response tool similar to clickers used with other software programs. Instead of punching a button to answer a question, students text the answer and send it to a central polling Web site the teacher projects onto a screen. Some of the sites allow students to compare answers, similar to a poll or survey.