Introduction
In this article we will walk you through how to use Comprehension tool from the perspective of a teacher.
If you’d like more information on how this tool works, you can check out the overview article here:
Tool In Action
How this article is structured
This article walks you through the steps of Comprehension activity, following the same flow as the tool itself. It will describe the process of using the active assignment. This refers to what happens after the assignment is published and available to students. It covers monitoring student progress, viewing submissions, giving feedback, and reviewing outcomes.
Note: When you open a published activity, you’ll land on the Active Assignment view by default. To return to the setup view after publishing, click Edit in the upper-left corner of the activity.
You can see the article about Setting Up this tool here.
Accessibility
We're devoted to making our tools as accessible as possible for all learners - to read more about accessibility in FeedbackFruits tools, check this article: Accessibility: Within FeedbackFruits Tools.
Overall Student Progress
Please note that this section is only available in the Active Assignment view. It will not appear while you are setting up the activity and will only become available after the activity has been published.
At the top of the assignment, you will see the Overall student progress overview. Here, you can see how many of your students have completed the task assigned.
If you click Statistics per active student, you will get more detailed information on each student who has started or completed the assignment. By clicking on the “EXPORT ANALYTICS” button you can download an excel file containing all the student progression and contributions.
Fig. 1: Overall student progress: Active assignment
Fig. 2: Full screen statistics per active student analytics
Once you scroll down, you will find 2 boxes. The first one, Instructions, contains the assignment instructions you provided while setting up the task, and the second one, Comprehension, the progress status of your whole class (i.e., Students who finished, are in progress with, or have not yet started the assignment) and the average workload per student undertaken up to that point (measured as average time spent, average number of annotations, and average comments on annotation per person).
Step 1: Instructions
Here, you can view the instructions you wrote while setting up the assignment. You can edit them by clicking on the Edit button in the top right corner of the screen.
Step 2: Comprehension
Once you scroll down, you will find step 2, Comprehension, the progress status of your whole class (i.e., Students who finished, are in progress with, or have not yet started the assignment) and the average workload per student undertaken up to that point (measured as average time spent, average number of annotations, and average comments on annotation per person).
Fig. 4: Comprehension, view annotations and analytics
This step allows you to see a preview of the file you assigned, along with the option to View Annotations. To see what your students have done, click on it.
Once you click on View Annotations, you see the file on the left side of the screen. Students' annotations are represented as colored in-text boxes with colors corresponding with the topic they belong to.
Note that these will overlap, the shades will darken, if more comments are made on the same text segment.
Additionally, just right off the file, you can see the annotations graphically outlined as either a white pen in a green circle or as colored dots on the progress bar. Note that you can click anywhere on the progress bar to jump to that part of the file, while also being able to click on any of the white pens to view individual annotations.
Fig. 5.1: Active Comprehension assignment view
On the right, in the Annotations box, options to filter annotations based on author as well as concept are provided. If you click on Filter next to any name (for instance, here we selected Connor Murphy) you will only see additions by that person. Click Unfilter to go back to class view. If you have selected 'see contributions within groups' in the set-up of the assignment, you will be able to filter on group.
Whether you filter comments by person (first screenshot below) or view annotations for the whole class (second screenshots below), clicking on Annotations just below the name of any of the topics you provided will list all of the individual annotations for that topic (i.e., 'Psychological Theories' in this case).
Fig. 5.2: Active Comprehension assignment view
Now, you have the option to upvote contributions by clicking the thumbs up icon, as well as comment on students' contributions, by clicking 'REPLY', just below each item.
Note that commenting will isolate the contribution you want to reply to, and will shift the file view to that show that particular annotation. Press enter or click the right-pointing arrow next to the comment to submit it. Once it is submitted, you can still edit or delete it by clicking the three dots arranged vertically next to it.
Fig. 5.3: Active Comprehension assignment view
Other aspects to note:
Once you're done commenting (or with any task), you can click on the left-pointing arrows at the top of the screen: in the annotation menu, this will take you back to the main annotation view; next to the assignment title, it will lead you back to the statistics screen (as will clicking Done).
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As a teacher, you can also post annotations. These can be either general, but related to one of the topics (by clicking on the white plus in a purple circle), or about specific parts of the file (by simply drawing a box with your mouse, while holding the left button down, over the specific section you want to annotate).
Step 3: Reflection on the activity
If you've added the reflection module to the assignment, you can monitor the student progress in the 'Reflections' table. Click on 'view all' to scroll through all of the reflections or 'view' next to a specific student's name to view their reflection. If students do not show up in the table, they have not started writing their reflection.
Fig. 6: Reflection on the activity
Step 4: Grading
At the bottom of the assignment, you will see an overview of the grading earned by the students. You can click 'publish grades' to push the grades to your LMS or schedule a publishing date for the grades to be pushed automatically.
In the last column of the grading table there is an 'optional grading adjustment' in case you need to make manual adjustments to the grades.
Fig. 7: Grading Table