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Useful in face-to-face, mixed delivery, and online classes
3-2-1
Basic Strategy
The 3-2-1 format is a quick reflective activity similar to think-pair-share. It encourages students to reflect on a course experience and organize their thoughts and identify areas of confusion or concern.
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3-2-1 Format could easily be adapted into an online discussion board activity.
Polling
Basic Strategy
Polling is a quick way to determine if students have grasped an essential content piece. It allows you to help students differentiate between almost-correct information and fully correct information. Discussion following the poll and using the results can be a useful teaching technique.
Why would you use it?
Polling can be a helpful tool for getting students to engage their thoughts and course material. This activity provides an easy way to check for understanding and gauge student interest. It is also an effective way to promote discuss or review material.
When can you use it?
This activity can introduce a lecture portion as a pre-work check-in or periodically through the lecture to give a break in activities or to promote discussion of results. For example "why did you choose this result?" or "Look at these results statistically. What is working about this poll and makes it useful in other contexts? What is not working about this poll and makes it less useful?"
How does it work?
In reaction to presented content, students are asked to use technology to interact with material using a platform such as Kahoot. The instructor pre-loads questions and pulls them up at the appropriate moment.
Students are then asked to complete the poll. Following the poll, the instructor can comment on the results or have students engage theresults. Instructors can also use the responses to help guide teaching decisions. Consider areas of curriculum that need to be reviewed again or specific concepts or activities that are most interesting for students.
Concept mapping
Why would you use it?
This activity provides an observable action of the student’s patterns of understanding related to a central idea or concept. Concept mapping serves several purposes:
- Helps students brainstorm and generate new ideas
- Encourages students to discover new concepts and the propositions that connect them
- Allows students to more clearly communicate ideas, thoughts and information
- Helps students integrate new concepts with older concepts
- Enables students to gain enhanced knowledge of any topic and evaluate the information
When can you use it?
Concept maps require a lot of cognitive work on the part of the student, and a lot of preparation and analysis on the part of the instructor. Be sure you have tested the concept map activity yourself and given the class the appropriate amount of time to complete the activity. Usually this means twice the amount of time it took you, the expert, to complete. This activity is useful in any course with high theoretical content, courses with large amounts of facts and principles.
How does it work?
- Select the concept/theme you wish students to use as a starting point.
- Create a concept map:
- Identify related key words or phrases. Write down words and key phrases.
- Rank the concepts (key words) from the most abstract/general to the most concrete/specific.
- Cluster concepts that function at similar level of abstraction and those that interrelate closely. Start to determine the ways the various concepts are related to each other and write that on the lines connecting the concepts.
- Arrange concepts into a diagram.
- Continue identifying the ways the various concepts are related to each other and write that on the lines connecting the concepts.
- Add second and third level associations, if appropriate.
- Good maps usually result from three to many revisions.
- After students have completed the concept maps, present your own example to the students and walk through it with them step-by-step, explaining your thinking as you created the concept map.
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Memory Matrix is a simple, two-dimensional table divided into rows and columns. The table is used to organize information and identify relationships in the content. Some cells in the table are intentionally left blank where students are asked to fill in the blank cells, demonstrating their understanding of the content. There is moderate investment of time required on behalf of faculty to create the matrix and then analyze the results.
Why would you use it?
The technique provides a structure for students to organize and synthesize complicated information. This exercise works well with large amounts of content and can simplify complex, dynamic systems of information. Faculty can identify prior or incorrect knowledge.
When can you use it?
Memory matrix is simple to implement and easy to use during instruction however there is some up-front preparation that must be completed. Consider content carefully. Content needs to appropriately align with column and row organization. This exercise is effective after lectures, videos, reading assignments, etc.
How does it work?
1. Carefully choose your content topic. Make sure the content can be organized in a table with rows and columns.
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