Active Participation Strategies

Use these strategies to get kids engaged with reading and writing.  You might want to write each strategy on a separate card for convenience and ease of use.

1.  12 word Summary - In 12 words or less, summarize the most important aspects from today's lesson.

 2.  Evidence Bag - Your ticket out the door is to write down two ideas you learned from today's lesson.

 3.  Numbered Heads -

 4.  Spectrum - Use a spectrum when asking for student opinion on a topic or question.

5.  A-B Partner Teach - Partner A turn to Partner B. Tell your partner the two most important things you have learned so far about...

6.  Idea Wave -

7.  Think-Pair-Share -

8.  Learning from A to Z -

9.  Quick write - Use a quick write to activate background knowledge, clarify issues, facilitate making connections, and allow for reflection.

10.  Socratic Seminar - Use a Socratic Seminar to help students facilitate their own discussion and arrive at a new understanding in which they learn to formulate questions and address issues in lieu of just stating their opinions.

11.  Graphic Organizers - This strategy provides an alternate system for organizing and beginning a piece of writing. These are visual tools that help students to organize their thoughts and ideas.

12.  Exit Slip

1.  What made learning easy for you today?

2.  What made learning difficult for you today?

3.  What do you still need to know before we move on?

4.  What did you learn today?

5.  What should our next steps be?

Students can answer self-selected questions/s or teacher selected questions/s.

13Fishbowl - This strategy provides students an opportunity to engage in formal discussion and to experience roles both as participant and as active listener; students also have the responsibility of supporting their opinions and response using specific textual evidence.

14.  K-W-W-L chart - This strategy helps students organize, access, and reflect on learning which increases comprehension and engagement.

What I Know - Where I learned It - What I Want to Know - What I Learned

15.  Talking Chips - Pose a question for students to discuss.

16.  Four Corners - The teacher posts questions, quotations, photos, etc, in each of the corners of the room.  The teacher assigns each student to a corner...or students choose.

17.  Jigsaw -