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Keywords: question, response, anonymous, voting, hot, flipping, polling, classrooms, upvote

Table of Contents

What is it?

Hot Question is used to create a list of popular questions or topics from a group. You ask participants to submit questions or questions or responses to your question, which may be in relation to a recorded lecture, a topical issue, a reading, or ideas for what to cover in a revision class. Participants can then submit questions related to that topic, which appear in an ordered list (the newest questions appear first). Participants may then 'rate' others' questions by clicking a Thumbs Up icon - this gives the item heat. The more votes, the hotter the question and the higher up the list it will appear.

Why use it?

This activity allow allows students to actively engage in class wide discussions, with the benefit of being able to ask questions/make comments anonymously. It is especially useful for large cohorts since it allows a group to decide collectively which topics are most important. It can help you identify any problem areas that your students are struggling to understand and you can plan your subsequent classes to address these. It is ideal for getting feedback from students on what to cover in revision classes.

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Before I start...

Ensure your students ' understand how they should use the activity. if you choose to allow them to post anonymously, make this explicit.

How do I set one up?

  1. Click the Turn editing on button edit mode on via the toggle button in the top-right of your course page.
  2. Go to the topic you would like to add the Hot Question to, hover your mouse over the topic area where you wish the questionnaire to appear, and then from the select the '+' symbol.
  3. Then from the 'Add an activity or resource drop down select ' menu select Hot Question.
  4. Give the activity a name And and and, in the Entries section, fill in ‘Submit Submit your question here’ herethis will be the question you want to ask.
  5. Decide whether you want students to be able to post anonymously and enable this if you do.
  6. Click Click 'Save and display'.
  7. Add your question/statement here and click Post, select your preference for 'unapproved questions visibility' and click 'Post'.

Anonymous posts

There are not many configuration options for Hot Question, but one is anonymous posting for participants. When enabled they can choose to hide their identity from other participants. You may find this useful if you are asking student students for feedback on complex or difficult to understand subjects or subjects or are trying to encourage students who may be worried about posting a "stupid" question. question they might not feel comfortable asking directly using their names.

Info
titleFurther help

Further guidance on Hot Question is available from moodledocsMoodle Docs.

If you find any inaccurate or missing information you can even update this yourself (it's a communal wiki).

If you have a specific question about the tool please contact the Digital Education team

Caution

Whilst students can post anonymously, their activity will still appear in the Moodle logs.

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This is what a hot question looks like. This example is asking students to post any questions they have about a video they have watched. You could also display the video within the hot question, alongside the instructions. UCL has a number of video subscription services you can draw upon. See: 

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ELDG 2015 - 2016; using Moodle (Hot Questions) in the classroom

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Questions & Answers

Q. What is a Word Cloud?

A. A word cloud shows popular words in larger text than less popular words. There are many free online Word cloud generators available, such as: http://www.wordle.net 


Here's an example of a Word Cloud:

Image result for word cloud

(Image source: http://aptgadget.com/word-cloud-makers/)

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  • Take the questions and create a Wordle that will show repeated words in larger text.
  • Ask questions on a Lecturecast recording, polling the questions asked and answering answer them in the next session.
  • Gather feedback during a session on certain aspects and with students rating the most important.
  • Establish an open-approach to asking questions, promoting students to considering other people's questions in lieu of their own.

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