Lesson Progress
0% Complete
- Think–Pair–Share (quick explain + check)
- Time: 5–10 minutes
- Purpose: activate prior knowledge, practice short explanations
- Steps:
- Pose a focused question tied to prior knowledge (e.g., “How does this new principle connect to what we learned last week?”).
- Think (1–2 mins) — individual reflection; encourage jotting a sentence.
- Pair: students explain their thinking to one peer (2–4 mins).
- Share: selected pairs report to class; teacher synthesizes.
- Tips: give sentence starters (see feedback stems below). Randomly pair so students meet different classmates over time.
- Peer Instruction (conceptual clicker-style)
- Time: 15–25 minutes
- Purpose: confront misconceptions, promote conceptual change
- Steps:
- Teacher presents a short conceptual question (multiple-choice) that targets a common misconception.
- Students answer individually.
- Students discuss answers in small groups of 2–4, explaining reasoning.
- Students answer again individually.
- Teacher reports results, addresses reasoning, ties to prior knowledge.
- Why: first attempts reveal mental models; peer explanation often convinces students in the zone of proximal development.
- Jigsaw (expert teaching)
- Time: 40–75 minutes (depends on topic depth)
- Purpose: build responsibility, deeper understanding, cooperation
- Steps:
- Split topic into 4–6 subtopics.
- Form “home” groups; assign each student a subtopic.
- Students from different home groups who share the same subtopic meet as “expert” groups to learn and plan how to teach it.
- Experts return to home groups and teach their peers.
- Whole-class synthesis and formative assessment.
- Assessment: have students write a quick summary or solve an integrative problem showing transfer to new context.
- Reciprocal Teaching (dialogic comprehension)
- Time: 20–40 minutes
- Purpose: scaffold metacognitive strategies (predict, question, clarify, summarize)
- Steps:
- Students work in groups of 4; each takes a role (Predictor, Questioner, Clarifier, Summarizer).
- They cycle roles across sessions.
- Use small chunks of text/experiment results to practice.
- Benefit: builds self-regulated learners; roles map to Kolb cycle and metacognitive skills.
- Peer Tutoring / Pairing for Practice
- Time: variable (weekly or integrated into lessons)
- Purpose: skill practice, remediation, and extension
- Steps:
- Use diagnostic assessment to pair students strategically (near-peer tutors often work best).
- Provide tutors with a short script or tasks and a checklist.
- Monitor, give tutors feedback about how to scaffold explanations (start from what tutees know).
- Caution: train tutors not to give answers immediately; they should ask guiding questions and check understanding.
- Peer Assessment (formative)
- Time: 15–30 minutes plus prep
- Purpose: develop metacognition; students evaluate and improve work before final submission
- Steps:
- Provide clear rubric aligned with learning goals.
- Model how to give feedback (use exemplars + non-exemplar).
- Students assess peers’ drafts and provide specific, actionable feedback.
- Students revise and submit final work with a reflection on how they used feedback.
- Why: assessing others strengthens evaluative criteria knowledge and improves self-assessment skills.
Scaffolding peer explanation and feedback
- Train students with micro-lessons on how to explain and how to critique kindly and productively.
- Use sentence stems (give these on a handout or slide):
- “I heard you say ___. Could you explain why ___?”
- “I agree because ___. Another example is ___.”
- “I’m unsure about ___. Can you show me where that comes from?”
- “One idea to improve this is ___.”
- “What evidence supports this step?”
- Use “I like / I wonder / I suggest” protocol for fast peer reviews.
Formative peer assessment rubric (simple)
- Criteria: Understanding (0–3), Reasoning & Evidence (0–3), Clarity of Explanation (0–2)
- Example:
- 3 = Clear, correct, ties ideas to prior knowledge and shows transfer
- 2 = Mostly correct, some explanation, limited transfer
- 1 = Partial or unclear explanation, misconceptions apparent
- 0 = Missing or incorrect
- Combine numeric score with 2 specific comments: (1) Strength, (2) One actionable improvement.
Please take the quiz to proceed: