How can students demonstrate creative thinking, construct knowledge, and develop innovation products and processes using technology?
My Personalized Triggering Event Question
With so many apps and technological resources to choose from, how do I figure out which apps are effective and which apps are not before implementing them into my curriculum?
There are millions of apps available for mobile devices that I really wanted to spend time figuring out how I can choose an app that is appropriate and effective for an instructional aide. In an article written by Min Wook Ok, Min Kyung Kim, Eun Young Kang, and Brian R. Bryant titled How to Find Good Apps: An Evaluation Rubric for Instructional Apps for Teaching Students With Learning Disabilities I learned how to find effective apps.
When evaluating an app you want to look at objective, strategy, examples, practice, error correction and feedback, item error analysis, progress monitoring, motivation, navigation, font, customized settings and lastly, content area and bias. Below I have created a table the describes the qualities of the highest ranking apps according to Wook Ok, Kyung Kim, Young Kang, and Bryan. The authors go into greater detail in each area and I do recommend reading the article to better understand the information below.
Evaluating Apps
Tips from Min Wook Ok, Min Kyung Kim, Eun Young
Kang, and Brian R. Bryan
|
|
Objective
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Clear and concise
Easy to find
|
Strategy
|
Broke down into manageable and connected chunks
Encourage, reinforce, and assess
|
Examples
|
Provides 3-4 examples for each concept or skill that
make connections between instructional skills
Examples model the concept or skill
|
Practice
|
Consistent and regular practice opportunities
At least 5 opportunities to practice the concept or skill before
moving on to the next step
|
Error Correction and Feedback
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Notifies the student of correct/incorrect responses
and are given the correct answer
|
Item Error Analysis
|
Keeps records of the types of errors that the student is making and
provides a report
|
Progress Monitoring
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Total point are provided
Progress alerts are detected by a tracking system
|
Motivation
|
Constantly maintains student engagement during the entire learning
process
|
Navigation
|
Easy and simple
Students can easily get assistance
Accessible (meaning simple, consistent and straight
forward)
|
Font
|
Font size is sufficient and modifiable
Font is easy to read
|
Customized Settings
|
Available customization settings to individualize
for each student
|
Content Area and Bias
|
Content is free of errors and up to date
Free from bias (like race or gender)
|
The main idea with this article and finding apps that are of good quality is to research it! Do not just blindly allow your students to use apps that do not meet the standards in the table above. Something that I noticed, and perhaps you agree or disagree, that many of these areas to evaluate seem to mirror types of good instructional strategies. I do think that this is the key to choosing an effective app.
Awesome chart- I'll refer to this in the future.
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