NowComment.com offers improved text analysis tools

With the goal of facilitating enhanced communication in their classrooms, several University professors have begun to use a new Web site, NowComment.com. The unique site allows students and faculty members to attach comments to specific sentences or paragraphs of a text that has been uploaded, instead of leaving a comment at the end of the document, founder Dan Doernberg said.

Doernberg contrasted the software with a blog or traditional online comment system, in which a user may have to sift through thousands of comments to find a specific one about a certain sentence or passage. By pulling all the comments of a particular section of the text together into individual threads, students can more easily find comments relevant to certain passages of a document and avoid information overload.

Based on initial responses to NowComment, the University decided to sign a contract to include it as one of the University’s core technological tools, Doernberg said. The software, still in its testing mode, has been implemented so far by a few University professors, including History Prof. Brian Balogh.

“I think it was great because it allowed students to really hone in on specific paragraphs and specific sentences in a text,” he said. “Unlike your average blog, it really allowed the students to talk to each other back and forth and to target their comments to specific parts of the text.”

Students have four different options when viewing an uploaded document. Students can choose a two-pane view in which they view the document in one pane and comments in another, a “comments in context” view in which all comments appear throughout the text in one window, a comments-only view, or a document-only view.

Balogh said NowComment has improved his classroom experience by reinforcing the “sense that looking carefully at text remains a very important part of the classroom discussion experience.”

Doernberg acknowledged, however, that NowComment cannot replace actual group conversation.

“There are a lot of situations where it may actually be better suited to a task than having everyone face to face,” he said.

Although Balogh plans to continue using NowComment in the next graduate class he teaches, he said he believes the software’s chance of spreading throughout the University depends on his colleagues’ willingness to embrace new technological innovations.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Facebook
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Twitter
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Posterous
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Print this article!

4 Comments

  • The comments listed below are submitted by users and do not reflect the views or opinions of The Cavalier Daily, its Managing Board or its staff.
  • For more information about NowComment®:

    * A teacher perspectives document provides a “compare and contrast” of online commenting and face-to-face group discussion
    * There are links to short tutorials and screencast demo videos on the NowComment Help page:
    * UVA’s SHANTI project (Sciences, Humanities and Arts Network of Technological Initiatives) is sponsoring and will be providing technical support for NowComment (and four other packages); a description of the underlying philosophy of why NowComment is in the “Shanti Suite” is at:

  • Sorry, the 3 URLs didn’t make it into that post, they are (in order):

    faculty.virginia.edu/jalexander/NowComment_teacher_perspectives.pdf
    nowcomment.com/help
    shanti.virginia.edu/wordpress/?page_id=116

  • SHANTI will be hosting orientation/demo sessions for faculty and grad students to learn more about NowComment on Monday and Tuesday (11/16 & 11/17). You can read more about the sessions at: http://shanti.virginia.edu/wordpress/?p=799

  • My cousin Dan Doernberg always has interesting information on the latest in computer tools and technology.

    Thank you for sharing this.

Leave a Reply

The Cavalier Daily welcomes your opinions, but reserves the right to edit and/or delete any comments deemed to be in poor taste or unfit for publication, and to block users from commenting in the future. Please exercise judgment when composing your response.