The EdTech Coach Podcast

Saturday, February 9, 2019

6 Apps for Digital Exit Tickets


It’s the end of the class.  You’ve just finished another one of your amazing lessons and now you’re sure your students are full of newly acquired knowledge.  But how do you know?  I mean, are you sure your students have learned everything you want them to?  There’s one way to find out, an exit ticket!  Since they’ve got they’re devices still on, you might as well put their minds and your teaching to the test and put the last few minutes of class to good use.

There are some good apps out there that can help you with exit tickets:

Socrative:  With Socrative, you could simply type up a “quick question” and ask your students to answer it.  Or, use one of the cool features about Socrative, the exit ticket feature.  The built-in exit ticket asks how well students understood the days material and what they learned in class that day.  The last question is reserved to be open-ended, asking students to answer the teacher's question.  This gives the teacher a great deal of flexibility as they can come up with a question on the fly.  The question can be asked orally or displayed in front of the class.

Padlet: Padlet lends itself to an end of class exit ticket because of its ease of use.  It helps to have a Padlet wall always ready to go at a moments notice.  Give your wall a generic name such as “what did you learn today” or “answer the teacher's question,” that way, it can be used any time.  Display the wall so students can see what other students have written so they can learn from them as well.

Twitter: If you already use Twitter in your class, this one is easy to do.  Simply ask your class a question with a specific hashtag.  Then, have students respond using the given hashtag.  What makes using Twitter convenient is the availability on smartphones and that most students are aready familiar with it.  Ask your students to take out their phones and respond to the question using the hashtag.

Google Forms: In much the same way you might want to have a Padlet always at the ready, you could have a generic Google Form ready to go.  If you use Chromebooks in your class, this is a no brainer.  Again, create a shor answer question that asks your students what they learned today or asks them to answer your question.

Flipgrid: Perhaps students would enjoy recounting what they’ve learned in a simple Flipgrid video.  Using an iOS device or Chromebook, ask your student to recount what they’ve learned that day. Or, if you want to see if your students have learned the particulars about a specific topic, give them a specific question to answer.

Google Classroom:  If you use Google Classroom, this would be particularly easy to do.  Create a quesion in the classwork section of Google Classroom, allowing students to answer it right in your Google Classroom page.

No comments:

Post a Comment