This document lists 55 different consolidation activities that can be used to summarize and review learning at the end of a lesson. The activities include having students list key things they learned, writing summaries, giving feedback to peers, creating diagrams, answering questions, and reflecting on their understanding through discussion or informal assessment methods like traffic light cards. The variety of active learning strategies are intended to solidify understanding of lesson content.
Lesson Plan for Writing Skill. It is targeted for 7 grade of Junior High School students. The genre of the text is descriptive text. The theme is pet animals.
Lesson Plan for Writing Skill. It is targeted for 7 grade of Junior High School students. The genre of the text is descriptive text. The theme is pet animals.
Tips and advice on how to do well on the Matching Sentence Endings section of the IELTS Reading exam.
For more English tutorials, please visit:
https://www.thelecturette.com
32 Strategies for Building a Positive Learning EnvironmentEdutopia
These tips were contributed by the educators and parents of Edutopia’s community in response to our Start the Year Strong Sweepstakes. There were many amazing entries, and it was a challenge narrowing them down to these 32.
This presentation focuses on the concept of active reading strategies. Participants will be introduced to an array of strategies to train students on going beyond the passive retrieval of information from a reading passage. The purpose is to shed more light on the advantageous use of advanced reading skills, such as summarizing, interpreting, comparing and analyzing to interact actively and effectively with any given text. In a similar vein, this practical workshop will engage participants into hands-on activities so as to practise a number of active reading strategies for encouraging and maintaining students’ motivation in reading classes.
Aim: To practice the use of relative clauses (who, which, that, when and where)
Interaction: Individually or in groups
Exercise type: Filling in the gaps
Language: B1
Time: 10-15 minutes
Materials: Slideshow, 5 pieces of paper for each student, markers
Procedure: 1. Give each student 5 pieces of paper.
2. Instruct the students to write down a different relative pronoun (that, who, which, when or where) on each of the 5 pieces of paper that they have. Recommend the students to use colorful markers and write in big letters that are visible from a distance.
3. You will be showing your students slides with sentences on them. Each sentence is missing a relative pronoun.
4. Display the slide with the first sentence on it. Allow some time for your students to read the sentence and to come up with a missing relative pronoun. The students need to raise the paper with a suitable relative pronoun up in the air as soon as possible.
5. In some cases two variants are possible. If this is the case, the students need to raise two pieces of paper.
6. The first three students to raise correct papers get an extra point.
7. The person with the top score at the end of the game wins!
Tips and advice on how to do well on the Matching Sentence Endings section of the IELTS Reading exam.
For more English tutorials, please visit:
https://www.thelecturette.com
32 Strategies for Building a Positive Learning EnvironmentEdutopia
These tips were contributed by the educators and parents of Edutopia’s community in response to our Start the Year Strong Sweepstakes. There were many amazing entries, and it was a challenge narrowing them down to these 32.
This presentation focuses on the concept of active reading strategies. Participants will be introduced to an array of strategies to train students on going beyond the passive retrieval of information from a reading passage. The purpose is to shed more light on the advantageous use of advanced reading skills, such as summarizing, interpreting, comparing and analyzing to interact actively and effectively with any given text. In a similar vein, this practical workshop will engage participants into hands-on activities so as to practise a number of active reading strategies for encouraging and maintaining students’ motivation in reading classes.
Aim: To practice the use of relative clauses (who, which, that, when and where)
Interaction: Individually or in groups
Exercise type: Filling in the gaps
Language: B1
Time: 10-15 minutes
Materials: Slideshow, 5 pieces of paper for each student, markers
Procedure: 1. Give each student 5 pieces of paper.
2. Instruct the students to write down a different relative pronoun (that, who, which, when or where) on each of the 5 pieces of paper that they have. Recommend the students to use colorful markers and write in big letters that are visible from a distance.
3. You will be showing your students slides with sentences on them. Each sentence is missing a relative pronoun.
4. Display the slide with the first sentence on it. Allow some time for your students to read the sentence and to come up with a missing relative pronoun. The students need to raise the paper with a suitable relative pronoun up in the air as soon as possible.
5. In some cases two variants are possible. If this is the case, the students need to raise two pieces of paper.
6. The first three students to raise correct papers get an extra point.
7. The person with the top score at the end of the game wins!
Techniques from the presentation "101 Interactive Training Techniques to Increase Learning" by Crystal Schimpf, Kieran Hixon & Nancy Trimm at the Colorado Association of Libraries 2011 Conference.
This is another motherlode of active learning strategies that someone put together from a variety of sources. It has over 130 different active learning strategies. Amazing.
NOTES/101 Tips-1.pdf
Interactive Techniques
Adapted in part from:
Thomas A. Angelo/K. Patricia Cross, Classroom Assessment Techniques.
2nd Edition. Jossey-Bass: San Francisco, 1993.
Alison Morrison-Shetlar/Mary Marwitz, Teaching Creatively: Ideas in
Action. Outernet: Eden Prairie, 2001.
Silberman, Mel. Active Learning: 101 Strategies to Teach Any Subject.
Allyn and Bacon: Boston, 1996.
VanGundy, Arthur. 101 Activities for Teaching Creativity and Problem
Solving. Pfeiffer: San Francisco, 2005.
Watkins, Ryan. 75 e-Learning Activities: Making Online Learning
Interactive. San Francisco: Pfeiffer, 2005.
These techniques have multiple benefits: the instructor can easily and quickly
assess if students have really mastered the material (and plan to dedicate more
time to it, if necessary), and the process of measuring student understanding in
many cases is also practice for the material—often students do not actually learn
the material until asked to make use of it in assessments such as these. Finally,
the very nature of these assessments drives interactivity and brings several
benefits. Students are revived from their passivity of merely listening to a lecture
and instead become attentive and engaged, two prerequisites for effective
learning. These techniques are often perceived as “fun”, yet they are frequently
more effective than lectures at enabling student learning.
Not all techniques listed here will have universal appeal, with factors such as your
teaching style and personality influencing which choices may be right for you.
Instructor Action: Lecture
1. Picture Prompt – Show students an image with no explanation, and ask them to
identify/explain it, and justify their answers. Or ask students to write about it using terms
from lecture, or to name the processes and concepts shown. Also works well as group
activity. Do not give the “answer” until they have explored all options first.
2. Think Break – Ask a rhetorical question, and then allow 20 seconds for students to
think about the problem before you go on to explain. This technique encourages students
to take part in the problem-solving process even when discussion isn't feasible. Having
students write something down (while you write an answer also) helps assure that they
will in fact work on the problem.
3. Choral Response – Ask a one-word answer to the class at large; volume of answer will
suggest degree of comprehension. Very useful to “drill” new vocabulary words into
students.
4. Instructor Storytelling – Instructor illustrates a concept, idea, or principle with a real-
life application, model, or case-study.
5. Pass the Pointer – Place a complex, intricate, or detailed image on the screen and ask
for volunteers to temporarily borrow the laser pointer to identify key features or ask
questions about items they don’t understand.
6. Empty Outlines – Distribute a partially completed outline of today’s lecture and a ...
Extensive strategies for how students are presented the information, how students make sense of the information and how students demonstrate what they have learned.
1. 55 Consolidation activities
1. „Gimme 3‟ List 3 things you found out/learnt today
2. List 3 things your neighbour has learnt today
3. Summarise this piece/topic in 5 bullet points.
4. 60 second challenge - sum up knowledge of text or write down all the words you can think of to
describe …
5. Identify the key points of the lesson from anagrams
6. Write 5 top tips/golden rules for …
7. Design your own “writing mat” to give advice to other students about …
8. Create a mnemonic which reflects the meaning of a new word or term you have learnt today
9. Identify missing words in a cloze summary of learning
10. „Ask it‟ basket. Write a question about the LO on a post-it and put in a basket for answering next
lesson
11. Take one minute to compose two statements in your head to explain what has been learnt and
how. Report to class. „phone a friend‟
12. Choose from 5 statements on the board. Which 3 best reflect …?
13. Self-assessment/target-setting - choose from a list of suggestions on whiteboard or devise own
14. Show work to peer - work in pairs to set targets for each other
15. Teacher shows relevant extract from previous pupil‟s work - students identify 3 strengths and 3
pieces of advice for improvement
16. True or false - hold up card/whiteboard to show whether statement on whiteboard is true or false
17. Write a short „blurb‟ (advert style) for a piece of work
18. Feedback to whole class by one or two groups only, according to rota, roll of dice or teacher
selection
19. Change role – pupil becomes teacher. What questions would you ask the class and why?
20. Groups of 3, numbered 1-3. Put up 3 statements on whiteboard which individuals must explain
to rest of group
21. Quick-fire oral quiz to review learning
22. Label a diagram or illustration - one word in each box
23. Brainstorm or mind map of what has been learnt during lesson
24. Graphic summary of lesson – e.g. steps, flowchart
25. „In role‟ answering - hot-seating activity. Students question a „character‟
2. 26. In pairs, answer the question set at the start on a post-it note. Stick on board and review
27. Where can you apply this skill/knowledge in your H/wk or other subjects? Give 3 examples
28. Who/what am I? Single question like „What‟s my line?‟
29. Prediction. What will happen next? Justify your point of view.
30. „Feelings Silhouette‟. Draw a person wearing a hat and carrying a toolbox. Annotate what has
been learnt near the hat, write skills and ideas near the toolbox. Draw a heart on the person and
write down the feelings about the topic and a rubbish bin to show what did not work or wasn‟t
understood in the lesson
31. Continuum. Students stand in a line according to how they feel about a topic. Can also be used
to explore statements and opinions.
32. Traffic Lights. Students use Red, orange and green cards to indicate their level of understanding
on a topic
33. Toss the bean-bag/ball. Students ask questions of each other based on learning.
34. „Splat‟ Put up key words on whiteboard. 2 students as „splatters‟. Class question the 2 at the
front. Students answer‟ by „splatting‟ the correct word on the board. Winner stays up, questioner
replaces loser.
35. Loop. Students answer questions on 2-sided cards. Green side: Question. Red side: Answer to
another question. Teacher starts and activity goes on until all questions have been asked and
answered, ending with the teacher‟s answer
36. Dominoes. Statements that connect together e.g. Calcium He Helium Na Sodium K
37. Answer teacher or student questions without saying yes or no.
38. Bingo. 4x4 grid
39. Newspaper headlines. Challenge small groups to invent a newspaper headline about the topic
studied. Present like newspaper sellers!!
40. Football commentary or match report. Give students reminders about a topic over a few
lessons. On a subsequent lesson ask them to feed back in the style of a football commentator
(a la John Motson) They could record these and play back to class
41. Diamond ranking. Set question. Students have 9 ideas to prioritise. Ideas on post-it notes and
arrange in diamond shape of importance
42. Verbal football. Students/teacher use previously devised questions. Split class in half and sit
facing each other. 3 questions in a row correct scores a „goal‟ If fail, other team still have to get
„three in a row‟ Team with most „goals‟ wins.
43. Pictionary. Students work in teams on whiteboard to draw knowledge/skills/facts etc. 2 mins
max
44. Pictures/cartoons – which would you put with today‟s learning and why?
45. Exit jeopardy. Give the answers to key points from the lesson. Students have to raise their
hands to give the question. If correct, they get to leave.
3. 46. Odd one out. Pictures or words put on whiteboard for students to compare and contrast
47. Freeze frame summary. Students take up a pose that would represent a concept, fact or
subject. Rest of class have to guess what they are representing
48. „Who wants to be a millionaire?‟ Students set question with 4 possible answers on learning
49. Blockbusters. ICT interactive game
50. Stand - up/sit – down. Q&A which forces students to stand-up/sit-down according to whether
they agree/disagree, true/false, higher/lower etc
51. In 1 minute, draw what you‟ve learnt today. Partner has 20 secs to guess.
52. Use „text – speak‟ to review learning on a post-it
53. Post-it „you‟re out of order. Sequencing activity
54. Elimination. Put up a list of numbers/facts etc on whiteboard. Give clues to eliminate to leave
one answer
55. Smiley/sad faces. Reflect on part of the learning and discuss positive/negative aspects. Draw
chart and respond with appropriate „faces‟ and points for improvement