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| Sharing your reflections through: | | Sharing your reflections through: |
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| [[Image:teachers_working_together.jpg|thumb|300px]]
| | {{activity|Whole group reflection| on brainstorm in the classroom.|10}} As a group discuss the following: |
| {{activity|Group discussion|10}} As a group discuss the following: | | * What was the objective of the new activity? |
| * What was the objective of the new activity/lesson? | | * How was the activity interactive? |
| * How have activities/lessons been interactive? | | * How do you think the activity went? In particular, how did learners respond? |
| * What lesson plans have you been creating?
| | * How did you integrate the activity with the rest of the lesson? |
| * How do you think the lesson went? In particular, how did learners respond? | |
| * What would you change if you taught this again? | | * What would you change if you taught this again? |
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| Skip the next activity if you feel participants already have a good grasp of what interactive teaching is like.
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| {{activity|Small group activity|10}} '''Moving towards interactive teaching.'''
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| We mentioned last time that interactive teaching involves moving from “telling” to “listening.” Discuss in a small group what other words you feel might describe the difference between traditional approaches and interactive teaching? What are the two kinds of classroom like? Can everyone come up and write a word or phrase for each approach?
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| Some contrasts people might make (let them suggest their own terms):
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| * passive - active
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| * quiet - noisy
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| * individual - collaborative
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| Note: these are not value judgments - they can be positive or negative in different circumstances!
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