Skip to Main Content
Boston University
  • Bostonia
  • BU Today
  • The Brink
  • University Publications

    • Bostonia
    • BU Today
    • The Brink
  • School & College Publications

    • The Record
Other Publications
BU Today
  • Sections
News, Opinion, Community

The answer is a click away

SPH professor uses new technology to enhance learning

July 10, 2006
  • Chris Berdik
Twitter Facebook
Wayne Lamorte's students click and learn. Photo by Frank Curran

When Wayne Lamorte teaches biostatistics students the difference between “relative risk” and an “odds ratio,” the School of Public Health professor of epidemiology paces in front of his 24 students, gives real-life examples, shows them graphs and other visuals, and interrupts his lecture with jokes and questions to prompt a class discussion. But when Lamorte really wants to know if the students understand the material, he asks them to click.  

The clicking is part of a new technology known as the Classroom Performance System (CPS), in which Lamorte uses his laptop to project multiple-choice or true-false questions about his lecture topics and his students click in their answers with TV-remote-sized transmitters connected to a wireless receiver. Time’s up after about 30 seconds, and numbers appear representing how many students selected each answer, à la polling the audience in the game show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? A small check mark appears beside the correct response.

“A lot of this is about trying to get students more actively engaged in learning,” says Lamorte, who is using CPS regularly for the first time in the Summer Institute for Training in Biostatistics, a six-week enrichment program for undergraduates from across the country funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and held simultaneously at BU, North Carolina State University, and the University of Wisconsin.  

“The lecture mode is a very passive form of learning. Attention drifts,” notes Lamorte.  “But the CPS engages everybody,” because the answers are not identified. “You get participation from the more quiet and anonymous students,” he says, who might not participate in a traditional classroom question-and-answer session.  

Lamorte isn’t the only BU professor using CPS, which is sold by a Texas-based company called Einstruction and promoted by BU’s Center for Excellence in Teaching (CET), which has three such systems available for professors to borrow. According to Alan Marscher, CET director and a College of Arts and Sciences professor of astronomy, the use of CPS by BU professors has been slowly spreading over the past five years, mostly in hard-science courses.  

“It’s especially useful in courses where you need students to grasp a concept before you go on to the next concept, where you’re building on what you’ve already taught rather than just hopping from subject to subject,” Marscher explains.

In addition to holding students’ attention, the CPS also gives Lamorte immediate feedback on how well his lessons are sinking in. “If we are all equally wrong on a question, it lets [the professor] know if there’s something he didn’t explain very well,” says J. R. Mortimer (CAS’08), the only BU student in Lamorte’s class.

Misha Rittmann, a rising senior from Grinnell College, seated next to Mortimer, agrees.  “It’s kind of like testing as you go along,” he says, rather than putting all the onus on one or two exams.

“It’s not just about electronics and true-false and multiple-choice,” Lamorte says. “This system can also facilitate an open forum for discussion.” For example, during one recent class, Lamorte used CPS to ask his class if they thought there were significant disparities in health care based on the race or gender of the patient, and if so, if they thought physicians contributed to these disparities. He then talked to the class about a study done on this issue published in the New England Journal of Medicine and showed them a clip from Nightline based on the research. Finally, he posed the same questions again to see if and how responses differed.  

According to Lamorte, while the CPS software and electronics are not completely glitch-free, the system gets high marks for ease of use. Lamorte’s biostatistics students concur. Asked whether it bothered her that answer tallies weren’t represented visually, such as in a bar graph like the audience polls on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? Cristin Casazza, a rising junior at Fordham University, responds coolly. “We’re statisticians,” she explains.  “We can handle the numbers.”

Explore Related Topics:

  • Classes
  • Faculty
  • Share this story

Share

The answer is a click away

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Chris Berdik

    Chris Berdik Profile

Latest from BU Today

  • Film & TV

    Want to Win Dunkin’ Gift Cards? Take Our Freakier Friday Trivia Quiz to Be Entered into Our Raffle

  • Student Life

    School of Medicine Welcomes MD Class of 2029 at Traditional White Coat Ceremony

  • University News

    Boston University Appoints New Full-Time Board of Trustees Vice President and Secretary

  • Watch Now

    We Gave This Terrier a Disposable Camera. See What She Photographed

  • Voices & Opinion

    As It Turns 90, Social Security Is Showing Its Age. Boston University Economist Has a Fix

  • Restaurants

    BU Student Leads a Restaurant—from Almost 7,000 Miles Away

  • Books

    SPH’s Michael Stein Explores Working-Class Americans with New Book

  • Things-to-do

    A Trip to the Sea via the T

  • Things-to-do

    Getting to Know Your Neighborhood: Fort Point/Seaport

  • Graduate Students

    Teaming Up with BU Sustainability to Give Bed Sheets and Towels a New Life

  • Neurology

    BU Neurologist’s New Book Explores Tales Our Brains Tell Us

  • Health

    35 Ways to Build the Community You’re Craving

  • Food & Dining

    Boston Has New Late-Night Food Options—and They’re on Wheels

  • Theatre

    Commonwealth Shakespeare Company Stages As You Like It on the Boston Common This Summer

  • University News

    Adnan Hyder, Scholar Dedicated to Improving Health Policies for Low- and Medium-Income Nations, Named Dean of Boston University’s School of Public Health

  • Student Life

    BU Paris Students Deliver Hospitality Research to the Palace of Versailles

  • Watch Now

    The Stories Behind These Eye-Catching Sculptures at BU and Beyond

  • University News

    Elise Morgan Named BU College of Engineering Dean

  • Public Health

    Grilled Meats Can Be Carcinogenic. BU Health Researcher’s Tips on Preparing Them More Safely

  • Things-to-do

    See a Concert Under the Stars with the Longwood Symphony Orchestra, Featuring BU Faculty

Section navigation

  • Sections
  • Must Reads
  • Videos
  • Series
  • Close-ups
  • Archives
  • About + Contact
Get Our Email

Explore Our Publications

Bostonia

Boston University’s Alumni Magazine

BU Today

News, Opinion, Community

The Brink

Pioneering Research from Boston University

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Youtube
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Weibo
  • TikTok
© Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
© 2025 Trustees of Boston UniversityPrivacy StatementAccessibility
Boston University
Notice of Non-Discrimination: Boston University prohibits discrimination and harassment on the basis of race, color, natural or protective hairstyle, religion, sex or gender, age, national origin, ethnicity, shared ancestry and ethnic characteristics, physical or mental disability, sexual orientation, gender identity and/or expression, genetic information, pregnancy or pregnancy-related condition, military service, marital, parental, veteran status, or any other legally protected status in any and all educational programs or activities operated by Boston University. Retaliation is also prohibited. Please refer questions or concerns about Title IX, discrimination based on any other status protected by law or BU policy, or retaliation to Boston University’s Executive Director of Equal Opportunity/Title IX Coordinator, at titleix@bu.edu or (617) 358-1796. Read Boston University’s full Notice of Nondiscrimination.
Search
Boston University Masterplate
The answer is a click away
0
share this
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.