Para establecer una adecuada comunicación y mejorar los procesos de enseñanza y aprendizaje dentro de un aula, es importante que el docente, además de su saber pedagógico, establezca una adecuada distribución de los espacios en el interior del aula. Individual en hileras verticales:. Es la que menos gusta pero una de las más usadas ya que se le dota al alumno el total de la responsabilidad del esfuerzo de aprendizaje. También es útil cuando se trabajan con medios tecnológicos individuales como ordenadores portátiles o tabletas. En parejas: muy conocida en España, especialmente en los niveles de primaria y secundaria. El emparejamiento permite el aprendizaje colaborativo a pequeña escala , pero también conlleva el riesgo de distraer a los mejores alumnos. En pequeños grupos: permite el aprendizaje cooperativo, que los alumnos con conocimientos o habilidades más adelantadas puedan enseñar a sus compañeros. El docente es considerado como un asesor. El inconveniente es que los alumnos pueden distraerse . En hileras horizontales: interesante para mejorar el espacio en clase, por ejemplo en la universidad o en las clases dotadas de equipos informáticos fijos para todos los alumnos. Esta disposición dificulta el fomento de la participación. Semicírculo o U: Otorga la posibilidad de crear 3 zonas de trabajo (laterales y fondo) Congreso o círculo completo: no es muy útil para las explicaciones de contenidos. Se suele recurrir para la realización de actividades o compartir experiencias. Escenario: como recurso de uso ocasional, se pueden retirar las mesas a los laterales del aula, y mantener en el centro-fondo las sillas, para que los alumnos visualicen como público una conferencia, actuación o pizarra digital . Por áreas de trabajo: está presente en la etapa de educación infantil ( no tanto en primaria y secundaria). Según este modelo el aula se divide en espacios individuales .Aunque es una distribución muy interesante.Algunas ideas:
Bell ringer journal for the entire school year including 275 journal prompts for middle and high school students. Looking for back to school activities? This bell ringer journal is a great way to create and establish routine while also strengthening skills! This product provides teachers with an entire school year of journal prompts in an organized and focused way. The journal is organized by month with 25 entries per section. Students will strengthen their writing and critical thinking skills with these unique, higher level thinking bell ringers. NOTE: This bell ringer journal has completely different prompts from volume one as well as different content. UPDATE: February 22, 2021, I updated this resource to include more diversity in the inspirational figures. This resource covers: ✏ 275 unique bell ringer prompts ✏ Open-ended response questions ✏ Vocabulary: 55 unique vocabulary terms that every middle and high school student should know before graduating. Answer key included. ✏ Creative Writing Prompts: 55 creative writing prompts that encourage students to think outside the box. ✏ Famous inspiration: Quotes from 55 historically famous individuals. Students will read, analyze, and apply the quote. ✏ Critical Thinking Prompts: 55 prompts designed to help students think critically about their actions and choices in life. ✏ Literary Elements & Figurative Language: Students will define, analyze, and apply as different term each Friday. ✏ Timely events based on month ✏ Black & white AND color options available ✏ Teacher directions ✏ Cover pages for each of the months ✏ Tabs to keep students organized throughout the year ✏ Zero prep. Simply print and distribute. Check out what other teachers, just like you, are saying about this resource: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ "I have used this resource for both distance and in person learning. Students complete this during morning work time as it is a great way to get their brains going in the morning in a low stakes environment. Students enjoy learning about new people, words, and ideas. Parents have also shown interest in getting a coy for themselves." -Dahlia M. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ "This is perfect! My students are aware of the expectation when they enter class to get out their journals and complete the daily prompt as bellwork, which allows me the opportunity to get class started in a calm way!" Allison B. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ "This is a great resource and is one of my favorite purchases this school year! I like the variety of people and quotes selected. I also like that it comes with more than enough quotes, so I can keep the ones that I like and discard the ones I don't. The Monday activities really require my students to explain their thinking. The colors are beautiful, but I am glad that it also comes in black and white. Awesome job! I am looking forward to purchasing more in the future!" -Lola B. For the DIGITAL version of this product, click here: DIGITAL Bell Ringer Journal for the School Year VOLUME 2 If you liked this product, you might also like: Bell Ringer Journal for Grades 3-5 Growth Mindset Bell Ringer Journal Please download the preview for more information. The preview provides images of the bell ringer journal pages in action. Connect with Me SuperHERO Teacher Blog Find me on Facebook Find me on Instagram Find me on Pinterest Find me on Snapchat: Superheroteach If you like this product, please leave feedback!
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Access the above chart by clicking on the graphic or the headline. Access the article below, here. "What effect do different classroom seating arrangements have on student participation? What does your learning space reveal about your teaching philosophy? Should teachers or students decide who sits where? In today’s article, we take a look at what the research says. "Learning spaces come in all shapes and sizes, from rectangular rooms built for 30 students where you can close the door on the world but still peer through the window, to flexible, open-plan environments with folding walls where scores of students come together. Outdoors, indoors, subject-specific spaces with specialist equipment and multipurpose rooms for whole school use." Via Tom D'Amico (@TDOttawa) , Dennis Swender
An Elementary Teaching Blog with tips, ideas and freebies for your classroom. For new teachers and seasoned teachers alike!
A fun esl printable gap fill exercise worksheet for learning, teaching and practising Present Simple Tense and Jobs. What do these people do? Fill in the blanks with the phrases in the list and number the pictures. Effective for improving English grammar and learning what people do at work.
Kayıp Nesneleri Bul -44- Resme dikkatlice bakarak, bazı kayıp nesneleri bulabilirsin. Hadi bakalım bunları bul ve boya.
Back to School Tips including seating arrangements, teacher must haves, and what I wish I knew from the begining of my teaching career.
Kick off the new school year with the perfect project for a young crafter or adventurer.
Coloring, crosswords, matching games and more — these activity sheets are hours of fun. Originally published March 2014. Updated December 2016.
FREE Call Backs and attention getters for the kindergarten classroom! Great classroom management tool!
This is a fun ESL worksheet where students practice the present perfect continuous and the present perfect simple tense.
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improve your english
A picture activity, based on a picture of a living room, to practise 'there is' and 'there are' and prepositions. The students have to supply the missing information based on the picture. - ESL worksheets
Here's a template for all your hangman playing needs! Of course, you don't need a template at all. My kids and I have played hangman on various bits of scrap paper found in my purse, including receipts! But having a template is fun too and helps when playing with younger kids. The version above includes the outline of the hanged dude and outlines for letter blanks. These make it easy for kids to trace. The version below has no outlines which allows players to make longer words, phrases, or even more complex hanged dudes! Hangman really is a game of unlimited fun! If you need directions on how to play Hangman, About.com has thorough instructions. Just click on the Hangman templates, and you can download them from GoogleDrive. After downloading, feel free to print them as many times as you like!
5 key reasons to teach students to analyze differing perspectives
It’s no secret that I am a MAJOR fan of class jobs – I mean…many hands make light work, right? Aside from having 20 or so helpers around the classroom, there’s a whole bunch of other reasons I think class jobs are super important: Helps build a sense of community…this is OUR classroom Gives students ... Read more
Got a talkative class? Check out these 5 ways to quiet the chatter!
Goal Setting - This 4th grade teacher uses post it notes to remind children of their goals upon entering the classroom. I love that her method to this has
An antonym is a word that has the opposite meaning of another word. Below is the list of common opposites in English you should learn.
As melhores atividades de inglês 3 ano para imprimir e baixar em PDF. São atividades e avaliações para 3º ano de Inglês prontas para aplicar em sala.
Stop taking away recess and using other punishments to control your students. Find success with 10 powerful classroom management strategies!
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Creating classroom agreements or a class mission statement is a must-do in your first week with a new class. I've found the book, "If Everybody Did" by Jo Ann Stover a fantastic way to lead into discussion on what we should do in our own classroom. I've always worked with my whole class to create their agreements and split them into groups to illustrate them. Here are some of the ways I've displayed them over the years. Then I'll show you some inspiring examples I've happened upon online. This Angry Birds display was from my first year teaching in a PYP school (clearly I did not yet know that the word "rules" is not used in PYP schools. Perhaps that should have read, "Our Golden Promises.") The children wrote and illustrated the agreements on giant eggs. Unfortunately I didn't get a photo of the finished display! Next came these hanging owls. The children illustrated the agreements on their tummies. And I'm sure you'll recognise these Lego superheroes from my blog header. They've been used to hold up classroom agreements for the last few years. They were painstakingly and lovingly made so I couldn't part with them after only a year. Here they are hanging at the front of my classroom. Lately I was really inspired by these class mission statements shared by Susan Powers' (author of the PYP Teaching Tools blog) on Instagram. If you don't already follow Susan online, make sure you do so! She shares fantastic, thought-provoking posts about inquiry-based learning in the PYP. This gorgeous Class Promise display was shared by Jennifer Jones. I love how simple this one from Upper Grade are Awesome is! The key words really stand out in colour. Naturally in a PYP school, you would not use the word "rules." However, the process she and her class have carried out to make these agreements is perfectly PYP-friendly!
Truly, whoever said that Middle School wasn’t fun? When I was in school, I would definitely say that Middle School were some of my favorite years. I loathed High School so we just won’t go there. Well, this past week while on Twitter, several teachers got to discussing the benefits of sharing things that we ... Read more
A few years ago, our school implemented "voice levels" as a way to help at assemblies, in hallways, and within our classrooms. This has really helped with consistency across the grade levels and made the first few weeks of school even easier when introducing these concepts. In our school, if a teacher needs to get students' attention, he/she will hold up our hand in the shape of a zero. If kids are working in small groups and are getting a little noisy, I would hold up two fingers to remind them it was "Voice Level 2". When we create presentation rubrics, we always include "Voice Level 3" as an area to focus on. In the beginning of the year, when we are making our Daily 5 Anchor Charts around expectations, Voice Levels 0, 1, and 2 always make an appearance. I have loved thinking of Voice Level 1 (whisper) as "Spy Talk"! In the past, I have used the fingers-on-the-voicebox trick~ if it vibrates, it's not Voice Level 1~ but the idea of talking like a spy is soooooo much more fun! This year, I ask my Teacher's Assistant to help be my Voice Level Monitor. If they feel it is getting too noisy, they will assist me in showing the appropriate voice level with our finger(s). Here is the file for the poster (I recently changed over my font, so it looks slightly different). **UPDATE: If you like this idea, you will love my new Voice Levels Management Pack available on TpT! Be sure to download the Preview to see everything that's included and read my updated post HERE for more info! Enjoy!
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There are four present tenses in English: present simple, present continuous, present perfect, and present perfect continuous. Each of these present tenses