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Top Teacher Theory vol 2_5: Classroom Activities
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From Theory to Plan: Translating Principles into Lessons4 Topics
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Active Learning Strategies6 Topics
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Differentiation and Personalized Learning5 Topics
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Formative Assessment: Techniques and Use4 Topics
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Classroom Management: Routines, Procedures and Environment5 Topics
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Collaborative Learning and Group Work6 Topics
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Questioning, Feedback and Scaffolding5 Topics
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Technology Integration and Digital Activities6 Topics
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Inclusive Practices: Equity, ELL and SEN Strategies7 Topics
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Universal Design for Learning (UDL) in Practice
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Accommodations vs Modifications
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Supporting English Language Learners (ELLs)
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Strategies for Students with Special Educational Needs (SEN)
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Culturally Responsive Teaching
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Behavior Support Plans and Positive Interventions
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Practical Example: Inclusive Lesson for ELL and SEN Learners
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Universal Design for Learning (UDL) in Practice
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Reflection, Action Research and Professional Growth4 Topics
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A practical guide for classroom-ready simulations and roleplay that build empathy, investigative reasoning and real-world decision-making. Low-prep options and a full mock‑trial sample are included so you can implement the activity immediately and adapt it to your subject, level and time.
Learning objectives (examples)
By the end of a simulation or roleplay lesson students will be able to:
- Demonstrate empathy and perspective-taking by articulating a character’s motives and feelings.
- Apply subject knowledge to a real-world problem and justify a solution using evidence and reasoning.
- Work collaboratively in role-based teams and respond constructively to peer feedback.
- Reflect on their decision-making and identify changes in their approach (formative growth).
Align these objectives with your curriculum’s competence goals (knowledge/skills/attitudes) and state measurable verbs (describe, evaluate, recommend, justify).
Why use simulations & roleplay?
- Activate learning: students “do” rather than listen — increasing retention.
- Build transferable skills: critical thinking, communication, collaboration, empathy.
- Diagnostic and progress tool: use the same case at start and end of a unit to measure development in reasoning and solution models.
- Low-cost and low-prep options make simulations feasible in any classroom.
Before you start: teacher checklist
- Define the competence goal clearly (what students must be able to do).
- Decide assessment approach (formative rubric, peer feedback, summative product).
- Choose a case or scenario aligned to learning goals and student level.
- Prepare minimal materials: role cards, evidence slips, paper for notes, timer.
- Plan debrief questions and feedback method.
- Consider emotional safety: provide opt‑outs or less intense roles, warn about sensitive content.