Why Piazza Works
Piazza is easy to use and takes minutes to set up. But what is it that keeps students engaged and saves you time?
It starts with students contributing.
Anyone can ask and answer questions on Piazza. With students teaching students, conversations on Piazza can continue long after office hours are over.
Piazza gives students anonymity options to encourage everyone—even shy students—to ask and answer questions. Instructor endorsements of good questions and answers let instructors push the class in the right direction.
Wiki-style Q&A makes finding the (single) answer easy.
Questions and answers on Piazza are community-edited. Each question has a single students' answer that students can contribute to, and a single instructors' answer that instructors can contribute to.
With wiki-style Q&A, when a student has a question, she doesn't need to sift through long threads in a forum to find what she's looking for; she can read just the single, high-quality question and answer.
A site that actually keeps up with class activity—in real time.
Students and instructors respond to questions fast because things happen fast on Piazza. Unlike static class websites, Piazza displays updates as soon as they happen, so you see changes in real time. A student can leave his browser open all evening and see the answer to his question evolve.
Mobile apps keep you connected.
Our iOS and Android mobile apps let you stay connected with your class on the go.
Keep up with class alerts by following along with email notifications. Configure your notifications to receive them as frequently (or infrequently) as you like.
Create a class that’s student-driven, instructor-controlled.
As an instructor, you have complete editorial control over class content. Your contributions in the class are highlighted, so students can easily identify instructor input.
You can encourage students to ask and answer questions by endorsing good content.
Manage course Q&A and resources in the same place.
Your course page is the place to manage announcements, course information and syllabi, and course resources. Think of it as your class website.
The announcements section lets you bypass your course email list. When you need to reach the entire class right away, just post a note, mark it as an announcement, and select the option to send it immediately to the entire class.
The course information section is an easy way to maintain details about the course and staff contact information. Make this the place students know to visit to check office hours for the week.
Students can visit the course resources section to find materials like homework assignments, lecture notes, and important links all in one place. Post a note when you update or add a new resource so the whole class is always on the same page.
View class participation to learn more about your students.
View your student participation report to see who frequently asks, answers, and edits, and who prefers to just read. Visit your overall class report to see when in the term the most questions are being asked and how they align with what’s going on in class.
Link directly from your learning management system.
Make student enrollment in your class on Piazza even simpler for both you and your students by using our LTI integration (that’s Learning Tools Interoperability). By adding a Piazza link in your LMS, students won’t even need a username and password to log in.
Interested? Learn more about integrating Piazza with your LMS
Use Piazza to become a better teacher.
Take advantage of the best resource available for feedback about your teaching: your students.
Ask students directly for anonymous feedback by posting a poll after a lecture. Encourage anonymous private posts to instructors for more detailed comments on what worked and what didn’t.
Use the questions that students post as a gauge to figure out what topics and assignments are confusing or easy, and who needs additional instruction. By monitoring activity on Piazza, you’ll get a better sense of where students are struggling and where your limited time and resources can be put to best use—in short, how you can become a better teacher.