How to teach a young introvert | ideas.ted.com - 4 views
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Alyssa Ruesch on 21 Jul 15Apps to participate through electronic devices: Socrative, Kahoot, NearPod, TodaysMeet
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Marlene Johnshoy on 22 Jul 15Plickers might be interesting for quick multiple choice responses.
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giving them opportunities to contribute to a class blog or something where their classmates will get to see their hearts and minds in this other forum. I think that really opens things up.
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a student who has one or two or three friends, and prefers to go deep with their friendships instead of being one of a big gang, there’s nothing wrong with that at all, in terms of it being a predictor for adulthood.
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If the kid is perfectly happy the way they are, they need to get the message that the way they are is cool.
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make sure to build quiet time into the school day, especially when kids are younger. Have 15 minutes set aside every day where the students just read.
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challenge teachers to rethink what they mean by class participation and start thinking of it as classroom engagement instead.
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tools that allow students to participate through their electronic devices as opposed to raising their hand.
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Apps that allow students to contribute to class discussions, sometimes anonymously and sometimes not.
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I agree this statement of "Number one would be to make sure to build quiet time into the school day, especially when kids are younger. Have 15 minutes set aside every day where the students just read." Question: As a classroom teacher, I am with my students 42 minutes per day, how can I take almost half of this time for reading? Shouldn't this issue be addressed as a whole school wide??
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I agree with you Diane - that would be way too much time for reading in just your class. In some classes, I do a 5 - 10 minute "free-writing" exercise that is individual. It seems like you'd need to scale the time so that it's appropriate for your class.
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A lot of students who might be reticent at first will feel emboldened by having first discussed it with a partner.
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Small-scale socializing. Socializing in pairs and small groups.
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Wow, just imagine how much calmer the world could be if classrooms were set up to allow for multiple temperaments as well as learning styles?! Also, the think-pair-share concept is fantastic; I've been using the "alone-paired-large group" sequence for language learners in groups since I got my CELTA certification and it's been hugely successful. Nobody wants to be wrong in public, and when learners have a chance to discuss it with a partner first, they are more likely to share their ideas.