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AA Top Teacher Theory vol 2_1: Classroom Activities
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From Theory to Plan: Translating Principles into Lessons32 Topics
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(A) From Theory to Lesson Plans
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1. One-Page Lesson Plan Template (fillable)
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2. Lesson Structure and Timing — Practical Rules of Thumb
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3. Mapping Theory to Plan — How to Translate Constructs into Steps
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4. Sample: Filled Lesson Plan (60 min) — Calculating Combinations (no probabilities)
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5. Formative Question Bank (quick checks to map to objective & ZPD)
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6. Quick Teacher Checklist — Before, During, After
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7. Practical Tips & Pitfalls (12 + concise cautionary notes)
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8. Short theoretical mapping (why this works)
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9. Short Rubric Example (for counting/permutation lesson)
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(B) Learning Objectives and Outcomes
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1. Principles: What makes a good objective
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2. Translate objectives into student‑friendly outcomes
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3. Checklist for writing objectives & outcomes
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4. Mapping objectives to the lesson structure
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5. Worked example — 9th‑grade biology lesson
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6. Quick teacher templates
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7. Common pitfalls and how to avoid them
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8. Final checklist before you teach
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(C) Sequencing & Pacing
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Micro‑sequence: the lesson template (for ~60-minute lesson)
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Macro‑sequence: mapping a two‑week unit
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Two‑week (10 × 60‑minute) pacing guide — ready to adapt
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Justifying method choice (how to explain to students / why they’re doing it)
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Monitoring progress & adjusting pace (practical cues)
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Quick checklist for teachers (before each lesson)
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Practical Example: 45-minute Lesson Plan
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(D) Differentiation & Inclusion Strategies (summary)
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Assessment & Checks for Understanding
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Extensions & Cross‑Curricular Ideas
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Common Student Errors & Teacher Prompts
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Teacher Notes / Script Highlights (select phrases you might say)
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(A) From Theory to Lesson Plans
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Active Learning Strategies44 Topics
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(A) Think-Pair-Share and Variants
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Core TPS structure (teacher-script + timing)
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Designing productive pairwork
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Practical classroom workflow that connects to your lesson context
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Follow-up TPS for generalization (Think–Pair–Share leading into theory):
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Formative assessment and feedback strategies for TPS
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Managing time and flexibility
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Classroom materials and tech (checklist)
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Appendix: Quick lesson-plan entry for a TPS activity (copy into your OneNote tab)
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(B) Problem-Based Learning (PBL) Basics
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Short PBL tasks for single lessons (ready to use)
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60‑minute Civic Education PBL: Full scenario — “Community Green Space: Whose Priorities?”
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Teacher preparation checklist (quick)
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Good practice tips & pitfalls
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(C) Hands-on and Manipulative Activities
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Example 1 — Fractions: Building Equivalence, Addition and Comparison with Manipulatives
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Example 2 — Physics: Motion Labs with Simple Materials (displacement, velocity, acceleration)
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Classroom roles, group routines, and scalability
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Assessment strategies (formative and summative)
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Reflection protocols and consolidation
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Quick templates you can copy
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Practical teacher tips
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(D) Simulations & Roleplay
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Low-prep simulations (fast, scalable)
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Assessment: formative rubric (sample)
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Debrief & reflection (mandatory)
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Sample roleplay: Mock Trial (classroom-ready template)
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Practical tips & teacher moves
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(E) Stations, Rotations and Learning Centers
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Classroom routines and management
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Station instruction template (one card for students)
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Assessment checkpoints: formative and summative
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Differentiation and supports (mixed-ability groups)
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Full example: STEM rotation for mixed-ability groups
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Sample short assessment checklist (station-level, teacher uses)
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Monitoring, correcting progress, and feedback routines
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Reflection, evaluation and closure
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Teacher checklist before first run
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(F) Practical Example: Active Lesson Sequence
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Lesson structure (minute-by-minute)
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Formative assessment & success criteria
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Differentiation & accessibility
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Classroom management & logistics tips
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Teacher reflection prompts (post-lesson)
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(A) Think-Pair-Share and Variants
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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
Participants 3
Lesson 2,
Topic 16
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Example 1 — Fractions: Building Equivalence, Addition and Comparison with Manipulatives
didactec 27.11.2025
Lesson Progress
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Learning objectives (measurable)
- Students will represent fractions with concrete fraction tiles and show equivalence (e.g., 1/2 = 2/4).
- Students will add simple fractions with like and unlike denominators using manipulatives and record symbolic answers.
- Students will explain and justify answers orally and in writing.
Materials (per pair or small group)
- Fraction tiles or fraction circles (1, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/6, 1/8)
- Plain paper plates or rectangular paper “pizza” templates
- Scissors, glue, markers
- Whiteboard or group recording sheet (OneNote page template for class)
- Optional: kitchen measuring cups for recipe scaling task (real‑life closeness)
Preparation (10–15 min)
- Prepare kits: one set fraction tiles per group; preprinted pizza templates if used.
- Create a OneNote/board page to record sample work and to display final symbolic solutions.
Step‑by‑step (60 min example)
- Motivation (5 min)
- Show a real object: an actual pizza or recipe for 4 servings. Ask: “If we share this between 3 people, how much does each get?”
- State objectives and success criteria: “By the end you will show equivalent fractions, add fractions and explain your work.”
- Mini‑teach (8–10 min)
- Quick demonstration: model 1/2 with a circle tile and show how two 1/4 tiles fill the same area. Do this on camera or board so every student sees.
- Pose 1 or 2 guiding questions (Why do 2/4 and 1/2 look the same? How do we record that symbolically?)
- Hands‑on activity: Station Tasks (25–30 min)
- Station A (Equivalence): Build 1 whole using different sets (e.g., 1/3+1/3+1/3; 1/4+1/4+1/2). Record combinations and write symbolic equations.
- Station B (Addition with unlike denominators): Using pizza templates cut into 1/3 and 1/4 slices, combine 1/3 + 1/4, rearrange to find common denominators (use tile overlays). Translate result to symbolic form.
- Station C (Real‑life problem): Recipe scaling — a cookie recipe uses 3/4 cup sugar for 2 people; scale to 5 people. Use measuring cups to model the fractions and sum.
- Roles: Materials Manager, Recorder, Checker, Presenter. Rotate roles each time.
- Teacher circulates, asks diagnostic prompts: “How did you decide the common denominator? Where did you get stuck?”
- Quick one‑minute round: each group states one result/one question.
- Reflection & advance abstraction (10–12 min)
- Groups present one artefact and show equations on the board. Emphasize the language: numerator, denominator, unit fraction, improper fraction, simplification.
- Use the Information Ladder formative tool: students write 1) I know, 2) I understand, 3) I can use, 4) I noticed.
- Summative activity / homework (5–10 min)
- In class: quick problem: Show whether 3/8 + 1/4 is equal to 5/8 using tiles and then symbolically justify.
- Homework: an applied problem (scale a recipe or design a 12‑slice cake with certain fraction requirements) with rubric: correct representation (40%), correct symbolic answer (40%), clear justification (20%).
Differentiation & extensions
- Struggling learners: give pre‑assembled fraction benchmarks (1/2, 1/3, 1/4) and two‑step tasks.
- Advanced learners: introduce mixed numbers and improper fractions or challenge: create three different fraction pairs that add to 1.
- Cultural closeness: use local foods (e.g., bread loaves, flatbreads) instead of pizza.
Common misconceptions & teacher prompts
- Misconception: “Add denominators” — prompt: “If one half and one quarter were lengths, how would you compare their pieces?”
- Misconception: equivalence is only about numbers, not areas — prompt students to compare areas, then translate to symbols.
Assessment tips (formative & summative)
- Observation checklist: uses manipulative correctly, explains reasoning, maps concrete to symbolic representation.
- One‑minute round or exit ticket: “Show 2/3 as tiles and write one sentence explaining why it equals 4/6.”