Learning Enhancement
Part of Innovision Incorporated's core philosophy is its dedication to Education and Training. We enjoy using our audience response software and hardware tools to enhance the learning experience. Studies have shown that repetition and interaction can dramatically improve your participants' ability to retain information. Audience polling keypads provide the perfect means to achieve this repetition and interaction in small or large audiences alike. While the possibilities are limited only by your imagination, here are just a few of the ways this can be done:
- Ask "review" questions in the form of a team competition
- Pre-test your audience to target your presentation to what the audience doesn't already know
- Post-test your audience to get an immediate measurement of learning gain
- Promote interaction by gathering opinions both before and after presenting materials
- Facilitate panel discussions by allowing the audience to prioritize topics or related items
Games
Why not make learning fun by turning your audience response post-testing and review questions into a friendly team
competition. Our graphics designers and software programmers can custom design anything our
clients can dream up!
Learn More...
Measure Confidence
It is often useful to understand how confident a participant was when answering a question. Our confidence based measurement system provides additional choices that allow your audience to indicate what they "know" the answer to be, what they "think" the answer might be, and even that they "don't know" what the answer is.
The system assigns partial credit to unsure responses and a stiffer penalty for confidently wrong answers.
When an audience member is faced with a standard multiple choice question and they are unsure of the
answer, they often guess in an effort to get credit for a correct answer.
This technique helps to remove
the urge to guess and provides you with more a accurate measurement of knowledge.
The results are displayed in a stacked bar graph which shows not only how many participants selected
each choice, but how confident they were.