15. Zero to Quiz in 5 Minutes
and other CALI resources
Elmer R. Masters
Director of Technology
CALI
emasters@cali.org
Editor's Notes
CALI QuizWright™ is a web app that lets law faculty write individual Multiple Choice, True/False, and Yes/No questions, saves the questions in a personal question bank, allows law faculty to bundle the questions into quizzes, uses CALI AutoPublish to instantly and securely publish the quizzes to the CALI website and lets students take the quizzes as formative assessments, either live in class or as homework, right on the CALI website, where most students already have an account. Faculty can view the basic results or access advanced analytic reporting from an online dashboard. Download of results to Excel for further analysis is available.
If you have a CALI account you can use that. If you need to create on, it’s easy and takes just a minute or so. You’ll need your law school’s authorization code.
QuizWright is just a tool, you’ll need to write your own questions to put in the quiz. We suggest you draft some questions in Word and you can copy and paste them into QW. QW handles T/F, Y/N, and MC questions right now.
Over 1,000 Lessons in more than 300 areas of the law.
Interactive, self-directed for student learning.
LessonLink - create unique trackable links so you can see the results
LessonLive – use LessonLinks in real time in your classroom or with your class online outside of the classroom
LessonLink Analytics – provides detailed data about how students performed on Lessons
CALI’s eLangdell Press = free casebooks and texts distributed under a Creative Commons license. Downloadable in multiple formats like epub for Ipad, mobi for Kindle, PDF (of course) AND Microsoft Word. This last one is particularly useful because it gives faculty and students the freedom to edit, re-arrange, remix and re-publish. For students, ther Word format can be a starting point for taking notes.
CALI’s eLangdell Press = free casebooks and texts distributed under a Creative Commons license. Downloadable in multiple formats like epub for Ipad, mobi for Kindle, PDF (of course) AND Microsoft Word. This last one is particularly useful because it gives faculty and students the freedom to edit, re-arrange, remix and re-publish. For students, ther Word format can be a starting point for taking notes.
CALI has taken this further. Lawbooks.cali.org is a website where you can make clones of our ebooks, edit them in the browser and then republish them in multiple formats for your students. It’s also self-publishing service where you can write your own books.
Every teacher who creates or clones a book gets a catalog