J Appl Adv Res 2018: 3(
Suppl.
1)
https://www.phoenixpub.org/journals/index.php/jaar
S38
Individual brainstorming
2. Think, pair, and share
:
Establish a problem or a question,
then pair your
students. Give each pair sufficient time to form a conclusion,
and permit each participant to define the conclusion in his or
her personal voice. You can also request that one student
explain a concept while the other
student evaluates what is
being learned. Apply different variations of the process—
your students will be engaged, communicating, and retaining
more information before your eyes.
3. Buzz session
Participants come together in session groups that focus
on a single topic.
Within each group, every student
contributes thoughts and ideas.
Encourage discussion and
collaboration among the students within each group;
everyone should learn from one another’s
input and
experiences.
4. Incident process
This teaching style involves a case study format, but the
process is not so rigid as a full case study training session.
The focus is on learning how to solve
real
problems that
involve
real
people—preparing your students for life beyond
your classroom. Provide small
groups of students with
details from actual incidents and then ask them to develop a
workable solution.
5. Q&A sessions
On the heels of every topic introduction,
but prior to
formal lecturing, ask your students
to jot down questions
pertaining to the subject matter on 3×5 index cards. After
you collect the cards, mix them up and read and answer the
student-generated questions.
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