A nice page of links to sources of mathematics ConcepTests (questions for classroom voting) from David O. Lomen at the University of Arizona.
The Cornell GoodQuestions Project, developing and testing materials for classroom voting in mathematics.
Bruce Atwood has some good materials on using classroom voting in statistics.
Mark Schlatter at Centenary College of Louisiana has done some work with ConcepTests in multivariable calculus -- described here and his library of multivariable ConcepTests is here
The instructor companion sites for our Calculus Text which includes ConcepTests for classroom voting.
A nice article describes classroom voting and its results here.
See also this paper that was in FOCUS, by Melanie Butler at West Virginia University.
I'm trying to get a server running WebWork going here at Carroll, so that we can provide students with instantaneous feedback about whether their answers are right/wrong, and give them further chances to get things right.
Role playing in-class activities from
Paul Francis .
Computer based astronomy labs:
Project CLEA has created a series of them
with free downloadable software, that allow students to gather data,
analyze it, and draw important conclusions.
These java labs were put together
at the University of Colorado at Boulder's Department of Astrophysical and Planetary Science, although they're rather touchy on what computers they work with.
The Presidential Vote Equation, as an example of using linear regression to analyze data, Roy Fair presents a model using economic data to predict predict presidential elections.
“The moment I awake, I long for my library and bound towards it, swift as a thirsty cat”
Yuan Mei