Promethean, McGraw-Hill Partner for Classroom Clicker-Based Assessments

CTB/McGraw-Hill and Promethean have partnered to bring classroom clicker functionality to the Acuity line of student assessment products.

Announced at the ISTE 2010 conference in Denver, CO last week, the new functionality will allow students to take tests via classroom response devices by combining CTB's new Acuity UnWired software upgrade with Promethean's handheld ActivExpression clicker. Acuity assessments were previously delivered only in pencil-and-paper and online formats.

The wireless ActivExpression device communicates over a 328 foot range with an included hub plugged in to a computer USB port and supports entry of words, numbers, symbols, and punctuation with a cell phone-like key layout. It also offers several question delivery modes as well as a self-paced learning mode. Installation of included software is required on a computer system running Mac OS X 10.4.11 or higher; Microsoft Windows XP, Vista, or 7; or Linux (Ubuntu or Mandriva).

Split into predictive and diagnostic categories with question content aligned to state standards, Acuity assessments cover reading and language arts, math, and science for third through eighth graders, as well as algebra for grades 6 through 12. Custom assessments can also be generated with questions drawn from an item bank. Scoring and results reporting are performed remotely over the Internet on CTB servers.

More details about Acuity can be found here and ActivExpression here.

About the Author

Evan Tassistro is a freelance writer based in San Diego, CA.

Featured

  • tool icons with variety of business icons

    SETDA Releases Free EdTech Quality Action Toolkit

    The State Educational Technology Directors Association (SETDA) has put together a free K-12 EdTech Quality Action Toolkit that provides a framework for evaluating education technology products as well as guidance on regulatory compliance, templates for communicating with vendors, training resources, and more.

  • Young child

    When Technology Serves Learning, Not the Other Way Around

    A reflection on designing learning experiences where technology supports instruction rather than defines it.

  • abstract colored blocks

    OpenAI Letting Go of Sora Short-Form AI Video Platform

    OpenAI is reportedly getting rid of Sora, its generative AI model that creates short video clips from text prompts, images, or existing video inputs. The move upends the company's December partnership with The Walt Disney Company.

  • abstract generative AI technology

    Apple and Google Announce AI Deal to Bring Gemini Models to Siri

    Apple and Google have embarked on a multiyear partnership that will put Google's Gemini models and cloud technology at the core of the next generation of Apple Foundation Models, a move that could help Apple accelerate long-promised upgrades to Siri while handing Google a high-profile distribution win on the iPhone.