SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Instructional Grouping StrategiesHome Group 4
Issues/Values ContinuumPurpose: to allow students to explore their own opinions about a certain topic or issueOpportunity to explore the diversity of perspectives in the classroomCan be used in a wide variety of classrooms, subject areas, and audiences
Issues/Values Continuum1. Select an issue that students have an opinion or perspective about2. draw a continuum on the board, marking the end points with extreme and opposite sides of the issueLabel points along the continuum, such as “strongly agree,” “agree,” “disagree,” and “strongly disagree”3. Explain labels and markings to students
Issues/Values Continuum4. Allow students to signify what they think about the issue by letting them physically place their name on the continuum at the point which most accurately reflects their beliefSticky notes with students’ names are useful
Issues/Values Continuum5. Have students who occupy various places along the continuum explain their perspectives and reasoningAllow students to change their minds on the issue and move their name to another spot on the continuum			6. Follow up with in-depth research on the 		topic, and again allow students to alter 		their opinions on the continuum
Taking A StandPurpose: discuss and deliberate on public policy issues through the use of persuasion and problem solvingCan be used with a variety of audiences, but works best with a large classroom
Taking A StandDescription: Five key steps step 1: present an overview of the issue and opposing side to the class (include examples and relevant details) phrase issue as a question requiring choice/action on part of the students present issue using point/counterpoint format – take student questions etc.step 2: Divide class in half: assign all students a viewpoint (one side of the issue – regardless of their own personal opinion) and have them pair up in their group and share the most important/compelling points on their side of the issue. Select students from each side to share/tell the class these compelling points.1. Teacher presents main issue or controversy2. Each student is randomly assigned a role to play in the group discussion and must fulfill that role without regard to the student’s own personal views on the issueHalf of the class will be making points for the issue, and the other half will be making counterpoints
Taking A StandDescription: (cont.)step 3: Encourage students to “go with their own beliefs” Students are allowed to switch sides (move) based on their own opinion – they may go to supporting side, counterpoint side and or middle location in room that represents undecided. After they move have them consider why they did and have them explain reasoning for the move to someone in the same location. Students can continue to move based on these discussionsTip: Teachers should monitor the class and ensure that students remain focused on the issue and its solution
Taking A StandDescription: (continued)step 4: Encourage interactions and descriptions: Ask 3-4 students on the point side of room to explain strongest argument for standing on that side. After each explanation allow counterpoint students to respond to comments they heard. Allow both sides to present their key arguments then when no new info/ideas are added focus on helping students to answer “What is a solution to this problem/issue” Have each consider pros and cons and have each location/group develop a solution before the class tries to unite these various ideas into one solution to reach some consensus..4. After both sides have presented, students can now choose which side of the issue they want to argue for, based on their own beliefsChoose between agree, disagree, and neutral5. Students pair up and explain the reasoning behind their belief
Taking A Standstep 5: Dialogical Reasoning Paper: Students write a four paragraph essay about an approved policy/stance of the same or a different issue following the format of the activity Follow-up: Students write a 4 paragraph paper describing what they learnedParagraph 1: state the issueParagraph 2: describe the pointParagraph 3: describe the counterpointParagraph 4: present and explain the solution
Literature CirclePurpose: engages students in critical thinking and reflection to gain a deeper understanding of a text Allows for student oriented discussions and focuses on finding new insights into a text
Literature Circle1. Teacher randomly assign students to small groups of 5-7 students.2. Students read assigned text.3. Students meet in groups and discuss what they have read. Include questions, comments, and insights.
Literature CircleEach student has a role to perform in the groupSummarizer: summarizes the main ideas of the text (Summarizes text, main ideas, key issues, plot points etc –keeps everyone on the same page with a  consolidated summary)Discussion Director: guides the conversation of the group and keeps the discussion focused on the task. Also cues the illustrator to show/explain image.
Literature CircleConnecter: connects the text with real world experiences, prior knowledge, and other texts, etc.Literary Luminary: picks out engaging quotes from the text that stand out or have special meaning. Uses these quotes to engage students in deeper discussions/reflections on the lesson or text.Vocabulary Enricher: selects words from the text that are important and have meaning. Creates a list of words to be defined or understood by the group.
Literature CircleTravel Tracer: helps the group keep track of the story and what is going on. Balances plot and changes in location or themes.Illustrator: creates or finds an illustration that visually portrays the main concepts found in the text. Explains the image to the group.

More Related Content

PPTX
Group 4 (ESE4340C)
PPT
Cooperative Learning
PPTX
Debate plan 2
PPTX
Debate plan
PPTX
Bethan and Zoe
DOC
Textbook analysis in class(1)
PDF
Academic reading-skills
PPT
Co-operative learning-learning a joint effort
Group 4 (ESE4340C)
Cooperative Learning
Debate plan 2
Debate plan
Bethan and Zoe
Textbook analysis in class(1)
Academic reading-skills
Co-operative learning-learning a joint effort

What's hot (20)

PPT
Learner Training - Developing Student Autonomy to Increase Engagement
PPTX
Ppt materials for ESP
PPT
Reading Strategies
PPTX
Module eight assessment in elt
PPT
PDF
EED Lesson Plan Template
DOCX
Middle Level Lesson Plan for Math class – Secondary Education
DOCX
Literature Review Lesson Plan
PPTX
Textbook Eval Workshop
DOCX
edTPA - Childhood Lesson Plan Template lesson ALL 3
PDF
ELT201 Week 1 The Learners and their Contexts
PPTX
Slides First Meeting
PPTX
Stages of literature learning in the classroom sir literal
PPSX
Assessing knowledge and simple understandObjectively Scored Assessments of Kn...
PDF
Handout Packet for Textbook Evaluation Workshop
PDF
EFL Learners’ Attitudes towards Literature Text Selection and Teaching Appro...
PPTX
Epc 2 part i updated
PPTX
BDA Literacy Strategies Flip Chart
PPTX
Assessing Reading Skills
Learner Training - Developing Student Autonomy to Increase Engagement
Ppt materials for ESP
Reading Strategies
Module eight assessment in elt
EED Lesson Plan Template
Middle Level Lesson Plan for Math class – Secondary Education
Literature Review Lesson Plan
Textbook Eval Workshop
edTPA - Childhood Lesson Plan Template lesson ALL 3
ELT201 Week 1 The Learners and their Contexts
Slides First Meeting
Stages of literature learning in the classroom sir literal
Assessing knowledge and simple understandObjectively Scored Assessments of Kn...
Handout Packet for Textbook Evaluation Workshop
EFL Learners’ Attitudes towards Literature Text Selection and Teaching Appro...
Epc 2 part i updated
BDA Literacy Strategies Flip Chart
Assessing Reading Skills
Ad

Similar to Grouping strategies presentation (Group 4) (20)

PPTX
Kamburov group learning strategies
PDF
Collaborative teaching and learning approach
PPTX
How Do You Effectively Engage Your Students in Learning?
PPTX
Active learning
PPT
Dce argumentative literacy 2010
PPT
Content literacy ppt
DOCX
EAPP QUARTER4 WEEK1 (3).docx
PPTX
ENGAGE Group Discussion
DOCX
Daily Lesson Log Grade 9 Quarter3 Week one
PPTX
Student engagement in the teaching profession
PPT
Content literacy strategies ppt
DOCX
Determining the importance in text
DOCX
Determining the importance in text
PPTX
Formative assessment and feedback strategies
DOCX
Loc lesson-template wissink
DOCX
Loc lesson-template wissink
PPTX
Group discussion in_engage
PDF
Lesson Plan 2 - Building Background Knowledge
DOCX
Ncab conference 2012
DOCX
Tools for formative assessment - Educational material
Kamburov group learning strategies
Collaborative teaching and learning approach
How Do You Effectively Engage Your Students in Learning?
Active learning
Dce argumentative literacy 2010
Content literacy ppt
EAPP QUARTER4 WEEK1 (3).docx
ENGAGE Group Discussion
Daily Lesson Log Grade 9 Quarter3 Week one
Student engagement in the teaching profession
Content literacy strategies ppt
Determining the importance in text
Determining the importance in text
Formative assessment and feedback strategies
Loc lesson-template wissink
Loc lesson-template wissink
Group discussion in_engage
Lesson Plan 2 - Building Background Knowledge
Ncab conference 2012
Tools for formative assessment - Educational material
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
1st Inaugural Professorial Lecture held on 19th February 2020 (Governance and...
PDF
O5-L3 Freight Transport Ops (International) V1.pdf
PPTX
Lesson notes of climatology university.
PDF
O7-L3 Supply Chain Operations - ICLT Program
PDF
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
PPTX
Pharma ospi slides which help in ospi learning
PDF
VCE English Exam - Section C Student Revision Booklet
PDF
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
PPTX
master seminar digital applications in india
PDF
Chapter 2 Heredity, Prenatal Development, and Birth.pdf
PPTX
Cell Types and Its function , kingdom of life
PDF
RTP_AR_KS1_Tutor's Guide_English [FOR REPRODUCTION].pdf
PPTX
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
PDF
Yogi Goddess Pres Conference Studio Updates
PPTX
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
PDF
Computing-Curriculum for Schools in Ghana
PDF
Supply Chain Operations Speaking Notes -ICLT Program
PPTX
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
PDF
A systematic review of self-coping strategies used by university students to ...
PPTX
Introduction-to-Literarature-and-Literary-Studies-week-Prelim-coverage.pptx
1st Inaugural Professorial Lecture held on 19th February 2020 (Governance and...
O5-L3 Freight Transport Ops (International) V1.pdf
Lesson notes of climatology university.
O7-L3 Supply Chain Operations - ICLT Program
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
Pharma ospi slides which help in ospi learning
VCE English Exam - Section C Student Revision Booklet
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
master seminar digital applications in india
Chapter 2 Heredity, Prenatal Development, and Birth.pdf
Cell Types and Its function , kingdom of life
RTP_AR_KS1_Tutor's Guide_English [FOR REPRODUCTION].pdf
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
Yogi Goddess Pres Conference Studio Updates
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
Computing-Curriculum for Schools in Ghana
Supply Chain Operations Speaking Notes -ICLT Program
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
A systematic review of self-coping strategies used by university students to ...
Introduction-to-Literarature-and-Literary-Studies-week-Prelim-coverage.pptx

Grouping strategies presentation (Group 4)

  • 2. Issues/Values ContinuumPurpose: to allow students to explore their own opinions about a certain topic or issueOpportunity to explore the diversity of perspectives in the classroomCan be used in a wide variety of classrooms, subject areas, and audiences
  • 3. Issues/Values Continuum1. Select an issue that students have an opinion or perspective about2. draw a continuum on the board, marking the end points with extreme and opposite sides of the issueLabel points along the continuum, such as “strongly agree,” “agree,” “disagree,” and “strongly disagree”3. Explain labels and markings to students
  • 4. Issues/Values Continuum4. Allow students to signify what they think about the issue by letting them physically place their name on the continuum at the point which most accurately reflects their beliefSticky notes with students’ names are useful
  • 5. Issues/Values Continuum5. Have students who occupy various places along the continuum explain their perspectives and reasoningAllow students to change their minds on the issue and move their name to another spot on the continuum 6. Follow up with in-depth research on the topic, and again allow students to alter their opinions on the continuum
  • 6. Taking A StandPurpose: discuss and deliberate on public policy issues through the use of persuasion and problem solvingCan be used with a variety of audiences, but works best with a large classroom
  • 7. Taking A StandDescription: Five key steps step 1: present an overview of the issue and opposing side to the class (include examples and relevant details) phrase issue as a question requiring choice/action on part of the students present issue using point/counterpoint format – take student questions etc.step 2: Divide class in half: assign all students a viewpoint (one side of the issue – regardless of their own personal opinion) and have them pair up in their group and share the most important/compelling points on their side of the issue. Select students from each side to share/tell the class these compelling points.1. Teacher presents main issue or controversy2. Each student is randomly assigned a role to play in the group discussion and must fulfill that role without regard to the student’s own personal views on the issueHalf of the class will be making points for the issue, and the other half will be making counterpoints
  • 8. Taking A StandDescription: (cont.)step 3: Encourage students to “go with their own beliefs” Students are allowed to switch sides (move) based on their own opinion – they may go to supporting side, counterpoint side and or middle location in room that represents undecided. After they move have them consider why they did and have them explain reasoning for the move to someone in the same location. Students can continue to move based on these discussionsTip: Teachers should monitor the class and ensure that students remain focused on the issue and its solution
  • 9. Taking A StandDescription: (continued)step 4: Encourage interactions and descriptions: Ask 3-4 students on the point side of room to explain strongest argument for standing on that side. After each explanation allow counterpoint students to respond to comments they heard. Allow both sides to present their key arguments then when no new info/ideas are added focus on helping students to answer “What is a solution to this problem/issue” Have each consider pros and cons and have each location/group develop a solution before the class tries to unite these various ideas into one solution to reach some consensus..4. After both sides have presented, students can now choose which side of the issue they want to argue for, based on their own beliefsChoose between agree, disagree, and neutral5. Students pair up and explain the reasoning behind their belief
  • 10. Taking A Standstep 5: Dialogical Reasoning Paper: Students write a four paragraph essay about an approved policy/stance of the same or a different issue following the format of the activity Follow-up: Students write a 4 paragraph paper describing what they learnedParagraph 1: state the issueParagraph 2: describe the pointParagraph 3: describe the counterpointParagraph 4: present and explain the solution
  • 11. Literature CirclePurpose: engages students in critical thinking and reflection to gain a deeper understanding of a text Allows for student oriented discussions and focuses on finding new insights into a text
  • 12. Literature Circle1. Teacher randomly assign students to small groups of 5-7 students.2. Students read assigned text.3. Students meet in groups and discuss what they have read. Include questions, comments, and insights.
  • 13. Literature CircleEach student has a role to perform in the groupSummarizer: summarizes the main ideas of the text (Summarizes text, main ideas, key issues, plot points etc –keeps everyone on the same page with a consolidated summary)Discussion Director: guides the conversation of the group and keeps the discussion focused on the task. Also cues the illustrator to show/explain image.
  • 14. Literature CircleConnecter: connects the text with real world experiences, prior knowledge, and other texts, etc.Literary Luminary: picks out engaging quotes from the text that stand out or have special meaning. Uses these quotes to engage students in deeper discussions/reflections on the lesson or text.Vocabulary Enricher: selects words from the text that are important and have meaning. Creates a list of words to be defined or understood by the group.
  • 15. Literature CircleTravel Tracer: helps the group keep track of the story and what is going on. Balances plot and changes in location or themes.Illustrator: creates or finds an illustration that visually portrays the main concepts found in the text. Explains the image to the group.