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Welcome to T213! Please DO NOW:. Complete Sustenance Survey and turn it into the basket at the front. Write your first name on both sides of a table tent Complete the “Who Teaches What” chart being passed around Help yourself to food!. Human Bingo.
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Welcome to T213!Please DO NOW: • Complete Sustenance Survey and turn it into the basket at the front. • Write your first name on both sides of a table tent • Complete the “Who Teaches What” chart being passed around • Help yourself to food!
Forced a student who feels overwhelmed by large numbers of students to get around and meet lots of people Motivation of winning Prompted more than a brief interaction—learned as much through nos and yeses Attaches 1 piece of info to each person; better than listening to lengthy bios People want to meet one another but need an excuse; this is a convenient excuse to do so Fosters comfort talking peer-to-peer rather than directing comments to teacher or trying to prove bona fides Good to have to write other person’s name Different cards require greater attention to people’s backgrounds Drawback: only calls for yes/no answers. Suggestion: Open-ended answers that foster open-ended conversations Think about room set-up: this set-up hindered flow People who know one another can stick to one another Lost sense of overall community: what we’re all doing, why we’re here, our common vision Question: should all squares have focused on professional background, or was prof/personal mix good Competitive game: focus on getting bingo over getting to know people Meta-pedagogical Analysis: Human Bingo Use in own classroom: Icebreaker May need to provide incentive to hs students? Developmental concerns: attention span, structure Could use to review/preview knowledge Need to think about special needs, ELLs, etc.; maybe wait until you know the kids
Framing Questions for this week: • What are “history” and “social studies,” and how did they come to be defined these ways? • What is the relationship between their characterization as scholarly disciplines and the implementation as school-based subjects of instruction both now and in the past? • How does gaining a historical perspective on these questions influence your understanding of what you are or will be teaching this year?
Journal: Please answer one of the first two FQs by drawing upon the assigned texts (Loewen, Ravitch, Moreau, Evans). Feel free to write bullet points, graphic organizers, abbreviated notes; you will not be asked to turn this in. (5 min) • What are “history” and “social studies,” and how did they come to be defined these ways? • What is the relationship between their characterization as scholarly disciplines and the implementation as school-based subjects of instruction both now and in the past?
Small Group Discussion of FQ3 How does gaining a historical perspective on these questions influence your understanding of what you are or will be teaching this year? Group 1: Melissa Claire Katharine Michael Sam S Brian R Group 2: Arpan Emily Jason Sam H Matt Group 3: Eva Nicholas Bill Luke Nicole Group 4: Allison Andrew Rose Susan Dave Justin
Whole group instruction Human bingo Small group discussion Pedagogical Repertoire:
Team A: Melissa Samuel H. Andrew Arpan Dave Eva Justin Nicole Team B: Nick Brian Claire Luke Mike Alison Rose Bill Debate Teams: Judges: Emily Jason Matt Katharine Samuel S. Susan