Smith Rebolledo (2018). handbook for Exploratory AR (1)
participating in the last activity. In the meeting with my colleague, he told me that he noticed that all the students were engaged with the activity, they were sharing their ideas in their groups, they gave their opinions, adding extra information, and he saw that all the students were really motivated, even the ones who did not pay attention in the previous class. The next class, I repeated the same procedure from the first observed class – I asked my students to write on a piece of paper (in Spanish) about what they remembered from the previous class. Their answers were: ■
■
30 of them remembered the contents of the previous class (and most of them remembered the activity of the map); ■
■
4 of them did not remember. Most of them could remember the previous class, so if I came back again to that content the learning could be linked to the previous class and learning could be meaningful. I realised that if I make a change in my class, I can change a complete situation and, the most important of all, changes are not really difficult to do and have an impact on my students. 1. Posing questions to help her clarify her issue.
2. Asking a colleague to observe her lessons.
4. Analysing all the information she obtained and making
conclusions about the effectiveness of her ‘wrapping-up’.
6. Giving a questionnaire to her colleagues asking them
for their perceptions of ‘wrapping-up’.
5. Identifying the ending of her lessons as a possibly
problematic area of her teaching.
3. Clarifying what it is meant by ‘wrapping-up’ on the web
A. Plan to explore