Click on the photo to visit the third grade version of "Teach Me And I Remember" in my shop! |
I love to use this activity as a partner lesson. Before breaking out to work, we take notes on the back of the board to outline what needs to be included specifically. For example, when teaching point of view, I went beyond the grade level standard to have them teach about the differences between first person, second person, third person limited, and third person omniscient points of view. Using one board per standard and using the back for notes/specifics allows me to differentiate easily and avoid having umpteen million different boards. I like “SIMPLE”. I like MEANINGFUL. I like this lesson. A lot.
Each group selects one option from the task board, and begins to plan the lesson before presenting it to the class. This is always a HIT with the kids, and it’s a great formative assessment at a higher level of Blooms’ Taxonomy. A win-win situation, to say the least!
I have decided to keep the same tasks for each standard because I like to keep it simple. I don’t like to waste precious instructional time constantly teaching new procedures. I feel that the six choices included in this pack are fairly broad and have plenty of room for diversity and creativity within them. For example, if students choose to do a multi-media presentation, they can utilize PowerPoint, Pages, Prezi, Glogster, and various other apps such as My Story. A song can be a rap, a ballad, a new tune, a song to an old tune, etc. Creativity often thrives within a predictable structure because students know what the expectations are and are free to experiment and synthesize information in new and meaningful ways. If, however, you wish to have more specific boards or more variety, an editable blank template has been included for your convenience and customization.
CHECK OUT THE PREVIEW FOR TEACH ME AND I REMEMBER FOR A CLOSER LOOK!
Here's a few snapshots of a presentation that some of my students made. We use Google Drive, so they created presentations using that software and shared them with me instead of creating a PowerPoint and uploading it this time around. That's okay with me! I am just happy that they are working with technology! I LOVE using Google apps with my kids. It's been a game changer.
Since I had some kids working on iPads and some kids working on Chromebooks, some kids used Google to send their presentations to me for projection, and some kids used Reflector to sync our devices and display their iMovies or PowerPoints with the class. Reflector is $12.99 a year, but it has a free trial if you want to try it before you buy it. It is one of my favorite techy tools. You can simply sync up to show what's on a smart device like an iPad or an iPhone (if you photograph student work or the student-generated exit tickets in this file). Pure magic.
As you can see, this activity is a nice way to see what your students know about a particular standard, it allows them to be creative, they get to have student choice, and they reinforce the concepts for each other one more time. LOVE. While we were working on POV, I had my students write a reflection about our day in first or third person narration. This was another great way to assess what they absorbed during our instructional time. I just used blank paper, so it's nothing fancy, but I loved reading their responses.
Well, I suppose it's time to wrap this up and finish my grad school paper. One more week and two research papers to go... then I start a new batch of classes. I am learning a lot throughout the gifted endorsement coursework. Mostly I am learning just how much I can juggle. :) Ha! If you happen to need entertainment at your child's birthday party, just let me know. In the meantime, have a wonderful week, friends!
Great ideas. You are always so inspiring!
ReplyDeleteDebinderry@gmail.com
Loved this! I would be interested in a kindergarten one!!
ReplyDeleteI love this AND I'm feeling lucky that I teach third grade!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much!
Erin
Short and Sassy Teacher
I would love to see this with 2nd grade targets!
ReplyDeleteI haven't heard of reflector! I'll have to check that out! It seems neat :)
ReplyDeleteKirsten
Great review! Storing away for next year.
ReplyDeleteThought you may like to read what teachers are saying about the PARCC exam. Lucy Calkins, Stephanie Harvey, and many others have started this site: http://testingtalk.org
One of the classrooms in my building has a Smart TV and the teacher and kids all have iPads. Would Reflector work for their class to project images from the iPads onto the tv?
ReplyDelete-Meg
http://talesandteacherisms.blogspot.com