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How can we show progress in a lesson?

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Whole class feedback. How can we show progress in a lesson?. Post It Notes. Give students post-it notes on which to write answers or reflections. These could be collected in, placed on the board or held up. Mini-Whiteboards. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: How can we  show progress in a lesson?
Page 2: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

Post It Notes

Give students post-it notes on which to write answers or reflections.

These could be collected in, placed on the board or held up.

Page 7: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

Thumbs

Ask students to show you with their thumbs how well they feel they understand the work.

It may be useful to have a display or key such as…

I feel confident with the work and could explain it to someone else.

I understand some of the work, but still have questions or am unsure.

I do not feel happy that I understand what we are doing. I would like more help.

Page 9: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

Stand-Crouch-Sit

Students stand, crouch or sit depending on whether they feel comfortable with the learning, in the middle or unsure.

Students who are standing can be asked to go around the room and explain to crouchers, who in turn explain to sitters until,

hopefully, everyone in the room is happy to stand up.

Page 10: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

Post It Divider

A variation on the use of post-it notes. Hand them out to students and divide the board or a large piece of paper into categories –

What have I learnt; What am I not sure about; What questions do I have

Or questions –

What is the answer to X?; Where might you use Y?

The students reflect on these on the post-its.

Page 14: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

Question? Answer

Put a question on the board and have different answers around the room. Students go to the one they think is right and justify

their decision.

Make this easier by having A,B,C,D points or posters in your room. Then you can have the answers on the board as well to save

faffing.

Develop by getting one member from each answer area to try and convince the others that their answer is right (good for encourage use of reason and uncovering of fallacy, misconceived

reasoning etc.)

Page 15: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

Objective Traffic Lights

How do you feel about the lesson objectives?

Red = don’t think I have grasped this

Amber = feeling OK about this, have just about got there

Green = Confident I have achieved this

Being specific to the lesson objectives is an alternative way of using the traffic light technique. It sacrifices an holistic, qualitative assessment for a

precise, quantitative one.

Page 16: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

Random Feedback

Use dice, short straws, roulette wheel, tombola, guess the number of sweets in the jar, to pick a group (or two) at random to feedback to the whole class on the lesson.

This is not whole class feedback per se, but with the random aspect could be used over a number of lessons to

achieve the same ends in a slightly different manner.

Page 17: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

Play-Doh

Ask students to model answers to questions using Play-Doh. These will be clearly visible, if potentially esoteric.

You could also ask students to model their feeling towards the learning – happy, OK, unsure etc.

Page 19: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

Evaluation Tree

Ask students where they feel they are on the tree in relation to the lesson or topic.

Make the tree into a whole-class feedback tool by asking students to put a post-it note on the board for where they are at.

Or, print off a large copy get students to write where they are.

Could be used subsequently to pair students/make groups.

Page 21: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

Muddiest Point

Another variation on mini-

whiteboards.

Students write down one or two

points on which they are least clear.

This could be from the previous

lesson, the rest of the unit, the

preceding activity etc.

The teacher and class can then seek

to remedy the muddiness.

Page 23: How can we  show progress in a lesson?

FingersA nuanced version of thumbs and traffic lights.

Students hold up fingers accordingly:

1 – I am fully confident with the learning

2 – I am confident with most of the learning

3 – Some parts I am confident with, other bits I am not sure

4 – I am only happy with a few parts of the learning

5 – I am having difficulty understanding any part