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Anchoring Activities. When: students have finished an assignment or project they first enter the class they are “stumped” and waiting for the teacher’s help. . What Is An Anchoring Activity?.
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When: students have finished an assignment or project they first enter the class they are “stumped” and waiting for the teacher’s help. What Is An Anchoring Activity? • Ongoing assignments that students can work on independently throughout a unit, a grading period, or longer.
Purpose • Provide ongoing tasks that tie to the content and instruction. • Provides the classroom teacher the time to work with other groups of students or individuals
Create Bulletin Board about current topic MAP Practice Packets Learning Centers Magazine Articles Math Puzzles/Games Research Projects Commercial Kits Write a skit or talk show about a current topic. Learning Logs Journal Entries Activity Box Silent Reading Create a storyboard for a commercial Examples
Work Best When: • Student expectations are clear. • Tasks are taught/practiced before use. • Students are accountable for on-task behavior and/or task completion.
Characteristics • Instructional clarity • Based on performance indicators • Curriculum-based • Differentiated to meet the needs of each student • Engaging
Benefits of Anchoring Activities • Maximizes instructional time • Facilitates Differentiation • Tailors activities to student needs • Connects to future learning • Creates tone of “Student as worker”
Planning for Anchoring Activities Subject/Content Area: ___________________ Name and description of anchor activity: What is the rationale for using specific content? How will students be grouped? How will activity & process be introduced to students? How will the activity be managed and monitored? How will student work be graded?