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I don’t want to put any child on the spot at all, but what I do want to do is get them involved, and get them knowing that “she may call on me at any point in time.” They can tell I’m not playing favorites here, everyone is going to get their name called at some point.

Basically get a cup, get some Popsicle sticks and write your students’ names on them. That’s it. As you are going through your lesson, simply, every so often stop and pick out one. Use some washi tape and write the student name on it, that was it.

I will have the student name usually on one end of the stick. Write the student name on one half, and keep all the student names up, so whenever you pick out one you call on that child, then you put their stick back down the other way. That way you know who has answered a question for you, who is staying on task, and who is not.

Hopefully next time maybe you can help someone else too.” Put their name and leave it up still, so it’s a chance that they’re going to get their name called again, until they get a question answered on their own.

I also grabbed several other items from that blasted Dollar Spot to use as prizes. You do NOT have to buy things for your classroom store by the way. You can always solicit parents for gently used toys.

Garage sales are another wonderful place to grab some great trinkets at a cheap price. Even Happy Meal toys or large stuffed animals are perfect!

Set up your organizer with the good stuff and I even grabbed a couple small backpacks for a few bucks each in the Dollar Spot and zip tied them to the rings at the bottom to hold any additional prizes to fill the organizer back up after students have shopped on Friday..”

I imagine by now most of you have at least heard of interactive response systems? For me, I know we have used them in the past in conjunction with our interactive whiteboards. They are little remotes that each child received and you could do a quick quiz on the interactive whiteboard and allow the students to answer. From that information, you were able to drive your instruction accordingly. It is wonderful for preassessment, middle of the lesson, or even a post-assessment review. The data is nice because you can break it down by question.

Comment (2)

  1. Chinhlv November 18, 2016 at 6:21 am

    I will have the student name usually on one end of the stick. Write the student name on one half, and keep all the student names up, so whenever you pick out one you call on that child, then you put their stick back down the other way. That way you know who has answered a question for you, who is staying on task, and who is not.

    Reply
    1. Fiora November 18, 2016 at 6:29 am

      For me, I know we have used them in the past in conjunction with our interactive whiteboards. They are little remotes that each child received and you could do a quick quiz on the interactive whiteboard and allow the students to answer

      Reply

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