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Classroom Activities for Effective Learning: A Comprehensive List, Exercises of Reasoning

Student EngagementActive LearningPedagogyClassroom Management

Various classroom activities designed to enhance student understanding and engagement. Activities include index card summaries, hand signals, one-minute essays, analogy prompts, concept maps, student conferences, observation, self-assessment, exit cards, quizzes, inside-outside circles, summary frames, think-pair-share, comparison and contrast paragraphs, cause and effect paragraphs, sequence paragraphs, given prompts, tic-tac-toe, 3-2-1, cubing, compare and contrast, but so, word sort, student feedback, take and pass, student data notebooks, slap it, flag it, ReQuest, K-W-L, and KWL+.

What you will learn

  • How can index cards be used to promote student learning?
  • What are some effective classroom activities for enhancing student understanding?
  • What is the purpose of a one-minute essay question in the classroom?

Typology: Exercises

2021/2022

Uploaded on 09/27/2022

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Download Classroom Activities for Effective Learning: A Comprehensive List and more Exercises Reasoning in PDF only on Docsity! Compiled by K Lambert, OCPS Curriculum Services, 4/2012 - Tools for Formative Assessment - - Techniques to Check for Understanding - - Processing Activities - 1. Index Card Summaries/ Questions Periodically, distribute index cards and ask students to write on both sides, with these instructions: (Side 1) Based on our study of (unit topic), list a big idea that you understand and word it as a summary statement. (Side 2) Identify something about (unit topic) that you do not yet fully understand and word it as a statement or question. 2. Hand Signals Ask students to display a designated hand signal to indicate their understanding of a specific concept, principal, or process: - I understand____________ and can explain it (e.g., thumbs up). - I do not yet understand ____________ (e.g., thumbs down). - I’m not completely sure about ____________ (e.g., wave hand). 3. One Minute Essay A one-minute essay question (or one-minute question) is a focused question with a specific goal that can, in fact, be answered within a minute or two. 4. Analogy Prompt Present students with an analogy prompt: (A designated concept, principle, or process) is like _________________ because _________________________________________________. 5. Web or Concept Map Any of several forms of graphical organizers which allow learners to perceive relationships between concepts through diagramming key words representing those concepts. http://www.graphic.org/concept.html 6. Misconception Check Present students with common or predictable misconceptions about a designated concept, principle, or process. Ask them whether they agree or disagree and explain why. The misconception check can also be presented in the form of a multiple-choice or true-false quiz. 7. Student Conference One on one conversation with students to check their level of understanding. 8. 3-Minute Pause The Three-Minute Pause provides a chance for students to stop, reflect on the concepts and ideas that have just been introduced, make connections to prior knowledge or experience, and seek clarification. ͻ/ĐŚĂŶŐĞĚŵLJĂƚƚŝƚƵĚĞĂďŽƵƚ͙ ͻ/ďĞĐĂŵĞŵŽƌĞĂǁĂƌĞŽĨ͙ ͻ/ǁĂƐƐƵƌƉƌŝƐĞĚĂďŽƵƚ͙ ͻ/ĨĞůƚ͙ ͻ/ƌĞůĂƚĞĚƚŽ͙ ͻ/ĞŵƉĂƚŚŝnjĞĚǁŝƚŚ͙ 9. Observation Walk around the classroom and observe students as they work to check for learning. Strategies include: ͻŶĞĐĚŽƚĂůZĞĐŽƌĚƐ ͻŽŶĨĞƌĞŶĐĞƐ ͻŚĞĐŬůŝƐƚƐ 10. Self-Assessment A process in which students collect information about their own learning, analyze what it reveals about their progress toward the intended learning goals and plan the next steps in their learning. 11. Exit Card Exit cards are written student responses to questions posed at the end of a class or learning activity or at the end of a day. 12. Portfolio Check Check the progress of a student’s portfolio. A portfolio is a purposeful collection of significant work, carefully selected, dated and presented to tell the story of a student’s achievement or growth in well-defined areas of performance, such as reading, writing, math, etc. A portfolio usually includes personal reflections where the student explains why each piece was chosen and what it shows about his/her growing skills and abilities. 13. Quiz Quizzes assess students for factual information, concepts and discrete skill. There is usually a single best answer. Some quiz examples are: ͻDƵůƚŝƉůĞŚŽŝĐĞ Compiled by K Lambert, OCPS Curriculum Services, 4/2012 ͻdƌƵĞͬ&ĂůƐĞ ͻ^ŚŽƌƚŶƐǁĞƌ ͻWĂƉĞƌĂŶĚWĞŶĐŝů ͻDĂƚĐŚŝŶŐ ͻdžƚĞŶĚĞĚZĞƐƉŽŶƐĞ 14. Journal Entry Students record in a journal their understanding of the topic, concept or lesson taught. The teacher reviews the entry to see if the student has gained an understanding of the topic, lesson or concept that was taught. 15. Choral Response In response t o a cue, all students respond verbally at the same time. The response can be either to answer a question or to repeat something the teacher has said. 16. A-B-C Summaries Each student in the class is assigned a different letter of the alphabet and they must select a word starting with that letter that is related to the topic being studied. 17. Debriefing A form of reflection immediately following an activity. 18. Idea Spinner The teacher creates a spinner marked into 4 quadrants and labeled “Predict, Explain, Summarize, Evaluate.” After new material is presented, the teacher spins the spinner and asks ƐƚƵĚĞŶƚƐƚŽĂŶƐǁĞƌĂƋƵĞƐƚŝŽŶďĂƐĞĚŽŶƚŚĞůŽĐĂƚŝŽŶŽĨƚŚĞƐƉŝŶŶĞƌ͘&ŽƌĞdžĂŵƉůĞ͕ŝĨƚŚĞ spinner lands in the “Summarize” quadrant, the teacher might say, “List the key concepts just presented.” 19. Inside-Outside Circle Inside and outside circles of students face each other. Within each pair of facing students, students quiz each other with questions they have written. Outside circle moves to create new pĂŝƌƐ͘ZĞƉĞĂƚ͘ 20. Reader’s Theater &ƌŽŵĂŶĂƐƐŝŐŶĞĚƚĞdžƚŚĂǀĞƐƚƵĚĞŶƚƐĐƌĞĂƚĞĂƐĐƌŝƉƚĂŶĚƉĞƌĨŽƌŵŝƚ͘ 21. One Sentence Summary Students are asked to write a summary sentence that answers the “who, what where, when, why, how” questions about the topic. 22. Summary Frames Description: A ___________ is a kind of____________ that ... Compare/Contrast: ͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺĂŶĚͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺĂƌĞƐŝŵŝůĂƌŝŶƚŚĂƚƚŚĞLJďŽƚŚ͙͘ďƵƚ ͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺ͕ǁŚŝůĞͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺ͙͘͘ Problem/Solution: ͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺǁĂŶƚĞĚ͙͕͘͘ďƵƚ͙͙͕͘ƐŽ͙͙͘͘ Cause/Effect͗ͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺŚĂƉƉĞŶƐďĞĐĂƵƐĞ͙͘ 23. One Word Summary Select (or invent) one word which best summarizes a topic. 24. Think-Pair- Share/ Turn to Your Partner Teacher gives direction to students. Students formulate individual response, and then turn to a partner to share their answers. Teacher calls on several random pairs to share their answers with the class. 25. Think-Write-Pair- Share Students think individually, write their thinking, pair and discuss with partner, then share with the class. 26. Talk a Mile a Minute Partner up – giver and receiver͙ Kind of like “Password” or “Pyramid.” Both know the category, but the receiver has his back to the board/screen. A set of terms will appear based on the category – giver gives clues, while receiver tries to guess the terms. &ŝƌƐƚŐƌŽƵƉĚŽŶĞ stands up 27. Oral Questioning - How is __________ similar to/different from ________________? - What are the characteristics/parts of _______________________? - In what other ways might we show show/illustrate ___________? - What is the big idea, key concept, moral in _________________? - How does ________________ relate to ____________________? - What ideas/details can you add to _________________________? - Give an example of ____________________________________? - What is wrong with ____________________________________? - What might you infer from ______________________________? - What conclusions might be drawn from ____________________? - What question are we trying to answer? What problem are we trying to solve? Compiled by K Lambert, OCPS Curriculum Services, 4/2012 37. Decisions, Decisions (Philosophical Chairs) Given a prompt, class goes to the side that corresponds to their opinion on the topic, side share out reasoning, and students are allowed to change sides after discussion 38. Somebody Wanted But So Students respond to narrative text with structured story grammar either orally, pictorially, or in writing. (Character(s)/Event/Problem/Solution) 39. Likert Scale Provide 3-5 statements that aren’t clearly true or false, but are somewhat debatable. The purpose is to help students reflect on a text and engage in discussion with their peers afterwards. These scales focus on generalizations about characters, themes, conflicts, or symbolism. There are no clear cut answers in the book. They help students to analyze, synthesize and evaluate information) One question on a Likert Scale might look like this: 1. The character (name) should not have done (action). _______________________________________________________________________ strongly agree disagree agree strongly agree 40. I Have the Question, Who Has the Answer? The teacher makes two sets of cards. One set contains questions related to the unit of study. The second set contains the answers to the questions. Distribute the answer cards to the students and either you or a student will read the question cards to the class. All students check their answer cards to see if they have the correct answer. A variation is to make cards into a chain activity: The student chosen to begin the chain will read the given card aloud and then wait for the next participant to read the only card that would correctly follow the progression. Play continues until all of the cards are read and the initial student is ready to read his card for the second time. 41. Whip Around The teacher poses a question or a task. Students then individually respond on a scrap piece of paper listing at least 3 thoughts/responses/statements. When they have done so, students stand up. The teacher then randomly calls on a student to share one of his or her ideas from the paper. Students check off any items that are said by another student and sit down when all of their ideas have been shared with the group, whether or not they were the one to share them. The teacher continues to call on students until they are all seated. As the teacher listens to the ideas or information shared by the students, he or she can determine if there is a general level of understanding or if there are gaps in students’ thinking.” 42. Word Sort Given a set of vocabulary terms, students sort in to given categories or create their own categories for sorting 43. Triangular Prism (Red, Yellow, Green) Students give feedback to teacher by displaying the color that corresponds to their level of understanding 44. Take and Pass Cooperative group activity used to share or collect information from each member of the group; students write a response, then pass to the right, add their response to next paper, continue until they get their paper back, then group debriefs. 45. Student Data Notebooks A tool for students to track their learning: Where am I going? Where am I now? How will I get there? 46. Slap It Students are divided into two teams to identify correct answers to questions given by the teacher. Students use a fly swatter to slap the correct response posted on the wall. 47. Say Something Students take turns leading discussions in a cooperative group on sections of a reading or video 48. Flag It Students use this strategy to help them remember information that is important to them. They ǁŝůů͞ĨůĂŐ͟ƚŚĞŝƌŝĚĞĂƐŽŶĂƐƚŝĐŬLJŶŽƚĞŽƌĨůĂŐĚŝĞĐƵƚ͙ Compiled by K Lambert, OCPS Curriculum Services, 4/2012 49. Fill In Your Thoughts Written check for understanding strategy where students fill the blank. (Another term for rate of change is ____ or ____.) 50. Circle, Triangle, Square Something that is still going around in your head (Triangle) Something pointed that stood out in your mind (Square) Something that “Squared” or agreed with your thinking. 51. ABCD Whisper Students should get in groups of four where one student is A, the next is B, etc. Each student will be asked to reflect on a concept and draw a visual of his/her interpretation. Then they will share their answer with each other in a zigzag pattern within their group. 52. Onion Ring Students form an inner and outer circle facing a partner. The teacher asks a question and the students are given time to respond to their partner. Next, the inner circle rotates one person to the left. The teacher asks another question and the cycle repeats itself. 53. ReQuest/ Reciprocal Questioning ReQuest, or reciprocal questioning, gives the teacher and students opportunities to ask each other their own questions following the reading of a selection. The ReQuest strategy can be used with most novels or expository material. It is important that the strategy be modeled by the teacher using each genre. A portion of the text is read silently by both the teacher and the students. The students may leave their books open, but the teacher's text is closed. Students then are encouraged to ask the teacher and other students questions about what has been read. The teacher makes every attempt to help students get answers to their questions. The roles then become reversed. The students close their books, and the teacher asks the students information about the material. This procedure continues until the students have enough information to predict logically what is contained in the remainder of the selection. The students then are assigned to complete the reading 54. K-W-L & KWL+ Students respond as whole group, small group, or individually to a topic as to “What they already Know, what they want to learn, what they have learned”. PLUS (+) asks students to organize their new learnings using a concept map or graphic organizer that reflects the key information. Then, each student writes a summary paragraph about what they have learned. 55. Choral Reading Students mark the text to identify a particular concept and chime in, reading the marked text aloud in unison 56. Socratic Seminar Students ask questions of one another about an essential question, topic, or selected text. The questions initiate a conversation that continues with a series of responses and additional questions. 57. Newspaper Headline Create a newspaper headline that may have been written for the topic we are studying. Capture the main idea of the event. 58. Numbered Heads Together Students sit in groups and each group member is given a number. The teacher poses a problem and all four students discuss. The teacher calls a number and that student is responsible for sharing for the group. 59. Gallery Walk After teams have generated ideas on a topic using a piece of chart paper, they appoint a “docent” to stay with their work. Teams rotate around examining other team’s ideas and ask questions of the docent. Teams then meet together to discuss and add to their information so the docent also can learn from other teams. 6.Graffiti – Groups receive a large piece of paper and felt pens of different colors. Students generate ideas in the form of graffiti. Groups can move to other papers and discuss/add to the ideas. 60. One Question and One Comment Students are assigned a chapter or passage to read and create one question and one comment generated from the reading. In class, students will meet in either small or whole class groups for discussion. Each student shares at least one comment or question. As the discussion moves student by student around the room, the next person can answer a previous question posed by another student, respond to a comment, or share their own comments and questions. As the activity builds around the room, the conversation becomes in-depth with opportunity for all students to learn new perspectives on the text. Compiled by K Lambert, OCPS Curriculum Services, 4/2012
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