Transforming classroom questioning using emerging technology

Br J Nurs. 2018 Apr 12;27(7):389-394. doi: 10.12968/bjon.2018.27.7.389.

Abstract

Classroom questioning is a common teaching and learning strategy in postgraduate nurse education. Technologies such as audience response systems (ARS) may offer advantage over traditional approaches to classroom questioning. However, despite being available since the 1960s, ARSs are still considered novel in many postgraduate nurse education classroom settings. This article aims to explicate the attitudes of postgraduate nursing students in an Irish academic teaching hospital towards classroom questioning (CQ) and the use of ARSs as an alternative to traditional CQ techniques. The results of this small-scale study demonstrate that ARSs have a role to play in CQ in the postgraduate setting, being regarded by students as beneficial to learning, psychological safety and classroom interaction.

Keywords: Assessment; Audience response systems; Classroom questioning; Postgraduate students; Psychological safety.

MeSH terms

  • Anonymous Testing / psychology
  • Attitude to Computers
  • Computer User Training / methods*
  • Education, Nursing, Graduate / methods*
  • Educational Measurement / methods*
  • Formative Feedback
  • Health Educators / psychology
  • Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
  • Hospitals, Teaching
  • Humans
  • Ireland
  • Reaction Time
  • Self-Directed Learning as Topic
  • Specialties, Nursing