Students create taboo cards--write the term, and five words that can't be used as clues. Then one person from the other team tries to get his/her team to guess the term without saying any of the taboo words.
Good for review of terms, students enjoy it.
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Frayer model
Four boxes around concept: essential characteristics, nonessential characteristics, examples, nonexamples. See Wormeli, Summarization in Any Subject
This worked well for summarizing primal religions.
Could be useful for abstract concepts, like absolutism or constitutionalism.
Have students write it on the board so they can compare.
This worked well for summarizing primal religions.
Could be useful for abstract concepts, like absolutism or constitutionalism.
Have students write it on the board so they can compare.
Friday, September 19, 2008
P-M-I
See Wormeli. Good for getting discussion on ethical isses, e.g., evaluation Peter the Great's westernization program
3-2-1
Three questions, the first calling for three answers, the next for two, the last for one.
For example:
What were three scientific discoveries in the Scientific Revolution?
What were two ways in which those discoveries affected people's lives?
What is one aspect of life not affected by those discoveries?
For example:
What were three scientific discoveries in the Scientific Revolution?
What were two ways in which those discoveries affected people's lives?
What is one aspect of life not affected by those discoveries?
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Point of View
Ask students to describe material studied (a narrative, a way of life, a set of beliefs), from a particular point of view. e.g., describe modern American society from a Hopi point of view, describe Lincoln's emancipation policy from various political viewpoints
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