mosai c of teaching the starr artwork by katie brown (grade 11) & sarah carpenter (grade 10)....

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Mosa ic Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture.

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Page 1: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Mosaic

Of Teaching

The

STARR

Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10).

Seeing the

Whole Picture.

Page 2: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Strategy Page #

Why use it? How can I use it?

ABC Brainstorming

3

Jumbled

Summary

3

Draw A Picture

3

Numbered Heads

Together

6 (#1)

Inside-Outside Circles

6 (#5)

Four Corners

6

(#14)

Gallery 6

(# 15)

Poster

Sessions

6

(# 19)

ABC

Summary

7

Ticket to Leave

7

Graphic Organizer for Today’s Workshop on

~ Active Learning ~

VG RU

AS

O

FV

Here’s whereyou apply the

strategy & ideas to YOUR

grade level &content area

Page 3: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

OK, LET’S REVIEWWHAT WE’VE

LEARNED.

WHEN THE MASTERAND HIS DOG GOFOR A WALK, THE

LEASH IS ATTACHEDTO THE DOG’S COLLAR...

WHAT IS THISCALLED ANDHOW IS IT

USED?

THIS IS CALLED A LEASH.

Active Learning

definition: “learning by doing”

antonym:

Page 4: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Individual Active Learning Opportunities

Students work alone to solve problems, ask & answer questions, process information, preview, or review.

Page 5: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Short Takes

QUICKLY shows me what you know & what you can do with the information

–ABC Brainstorming

–Jumbled Summary

–Draw a Picture

Page 6: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

ABC Brainstorming

Before an explanation or demonstration, ask the students to think of one word or phrase beginning with each letter of the alphabet that is connected to the topic.

Usually, not all letters will be filled in (but you can then have students “give one-get one” to be more complete.)

Page 7: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Jumbled Summary

Write key words or phrases from an explanation in random order. Ask students to “unscramble” the terms and reorder them in logical sequence as a knowledge check.

Page 8: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Draw a Picture

At the end of a segment of teacher-directed instruction, ask participants to work in pairs to create a graphic summary of how they would organize information, reach a conclusion, or interact differently based on the demonstration you provided.

Page 9: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Small Group Active Learning Opportunities

Students work together in pairs or in small groups to solve problems, ask

& answer questions, brainstorm, process information, or review.

Page 10: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Numbered Heads Together

•Students number off in their team.

•Teacher poses a question.

•Students discuss the question.

•Teacher calls a student number & a team number.

•The student shares what his or her team discussed.

Page 11: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Question 1

Tell one thing (from the article) you agree with

and why.

Page 12: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Question 2

Is human cloning for therapeutic reasons OK?

Why or why not?

Page 13: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Question 3

Is human cloning for infertility OK? Why or

why not?

Page 14: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Inside-Outside Circle

•Students stand in concentric circles, with the inside circle facing out and the outside circle facing in.•Teacher asks a question. Students take turns responding.•Teacher rotates circles after every

question.

Page 15: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Question 1

Who do you think the “children of the Holocaust

are? Why do you think so?

Page 16: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Question 2

What does the author mean by, “We shall never let the victims

be forgotten for if we do, we will forget that the perpetrator can

be in all of us”?

Page 17: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Question 3

Give a modern-day example of a situation similar to the

Holocaust. Explain why your example is similar.

Page 18: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Four Corners

•Teacher announces corners.

•Students think & write.

•Students go to corners.

•Small groups discuss.

Page 19: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Gallery•Students form pairs or trios.•Teacher poses a series of questions on butcher paper (posted around the room).•Pairs/trios talk about the questions, write answers on post-it notes or scraps of paper, then circulate around the room recording their answers on the large paper. Other answers may spark more ideas, so they may continue to add answers.•Debrief class by asking them to synthesize what has been recorded.•NOTE: for a more structured activity, assign each group a “station” and give them an allotted time to write. Then each group rotates to the next “station” where a new question awaits.

Page 20: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Poster Sessions

•Before the poster session, require that all students submit 2-3 higher order questions about their project (to serve as a scavenger hunt).•After a research project, a number of students set up their displays around the classroom.•The student or team of students stands beside the poster ready to interact with those who rotate by.•Other students rotate through the displays, looking for answers to their scavenger hunt. They may question the creator and/or read the display.

Page 21: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Active Lesson Closure(More short-takes)

ABC Summary

Ticket to Leave

Page 22: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

ABC Summary

At the end of an explanation or demonstration, give each student a different letter of the alphabet & ask them to think of one word or phrase beginning with that letter that is connected to the topic.

Use the responses for a whole class discussion review or as a lead-in to a writing assignment.

Page 23: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Ticket to Leave•Give the students a question just before lunch, recess, or special area time. •After they answer it, they hand it to you on their way out.

•Review the answers and either respond in writing, use them as a starting point for the next lesson, or as a basis to re-teach misunderstood information.

Page 24: Mosai c Of Teaching The STARR Artwork by Katie Brown (Grade 11) & Sarah Carpenter (Grade 10). Seeing the Whole Picture

Please complete the evaluation forms, turn them over, and

leave them at the table in the front of the room.

Thank you for your time.

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