Back to resources Article Contents Blog Creating an Interactive Classroom April 19, 2019 Author: Read time: 1 min Share This Article Copy Link Share on Linkedin Share on X Share via Email Dr. David Munson of Texas A&M shares how he’s creating an interactive classroom with Packback. Institution Texas A&M University DEPARTMENT Communication COURSE Public Speaking SIZE 20-25 Students Dr. David Munson noticed students in his lecture-based courses were often disengaged during class. To create a more interactive classroom, Dr. Munson starting using Packback in his Public Speaking class. With Packback, students began having productive discussions about their speeches, creating an interactive classroom where students were no longer only listening to each other give speeches but were providing positive and constructive feedback to one another. “Learning requires an active mind. In the classroom for lecture-based instructors like myself, yeah it’s great that we have control, but there’s always an unintended side effect. And that unattended side effect is that it makes students a passive audience. They can just come in and as long as they’re there, with their ears kind of open, they’ll get through the class. But Packback flips that, and it allows the audience to turn into an active audience and even more so, an interactive audience.“
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