Teach Like A Champion (63 Techniques)
Means of Participation
includes cold call, volunteers, call and response, turn and talk, everybody writes, hand signals, etc.
Regular Revision
making student's writing better by making revision and everyday act
Active Observation
deciding intentionally what to look for and maintaining discipline in looking for what you have prioritized
Delivery Moves
drafting a plan for how you will engage students in your questions with intentional decisions
No Opt Out
A sequence that begins with a student unable to answer a question should end with the student answering that question as often as possible.
Warm/Strict
Be both warm and strict at the same time to send a message of high expectations, caring, and respect
Turn and Talk
Encourage students to better formulate their thoughts by including short, contained pair discussions - but make sure to design them for maximum efficiency and accountability.
Exit Ticket
End each class with an explicit assessment of your objective that you can use to evaluate your (and your students') success.
Accountable Independent Reading
1) assign reading in smaller durations at first 2) assess intentionally (ideally observational) 3) embed the reading within the arc of the instruction
Routine Building
1) short speech where you explain what and why 2) walk students through the procedure (outline) 3) model and describe in detail 4) students practice
Brighten the Lines
Ensure that changes in activities and other mileposts are perceived clearly by making beginnings and endings of activities visible and crisp.
Art of the Consequence
Ensure that consequences, when needed, are more effective by making them quick, incremental, consistent, and depersonalized. It also helps to make a bounce-back statement, showing students that they can quickly get back in the game.
Strong Voice
Affirm your authority through intentional verbal and nonverbal habits, especially at moments when you need control.
Wait Time
Allow students time to think before answering. If they aren't productive with that time, narrate them toward being more productive.
Front the Writing
Arrange lessons so that writing comes earlier in the process to ensure that students think rigorously in writing
Double Plan
As you plan a lesson, plan what students will be doing at each point in class
Art of the Sentence
Ask students to synthesize a complex idea in a single, well-crafted sentence. The discipline of having to make one sentence do all the work pushes students to use new syntactical forms.
Call and Response
Ask your class to answer questions in unison from time to time to build energetic, positive engagement.
Cold Call
Call on students regardless of whether they've raised their hands.
Joy Factor
Celebrate the work of learning as you go
Show Call
Create a strong incentive to complete writing with quality and thoughtfulness by publicly showcasing and revising student writing - regardless of who volunteers to share [visual cold call]
Culture of Error
Create an environment where your students feel safe making and discussing mistakes, so you can spend less time hunting for errors and more time fixing them.
Without Apology
Embrace - rather than apologize for - rigorous content, academic challenge, and the hard work necessary
FASE Reading
Fluency - reading aloud builds this Accountability - making sure your students are reading Social - read together; shared experiences Expressive - breath life into text
Threshold and Strong Start
Meet your students at the door, setting expectations before they enter the classroom AND Design and establish an efficient routine for students to enter the classroom and begin class
Board = Paper
Model and shape how students should take notes in order to capture information you present.
Batch Process
Give more ownerships and autonomy to students- by allowing for student discussion without teacher mediation, for short periods of time or for longer, more formal sequences
Do It Again
Give students more practice when they're not up to speed - not just doing something again, but doing it better, striving to do their best.
Positive Farming
Guide students to do better work while motivating and inspiring them by using positive tone to deliver constructive feedback.
Show Me
Have students actively show visual evidence of their understanding
Own and Track
Have students correct or revise their own work, fostering an environment of accountability for the correct answer.
Plan for Error
Increase the likelihood that you'll recognize and respond to errors by planning for common mistakes in advance
Affirmative Checking
Insert specific points into your lesson when students must get confirmation that their work is correct, productive, or sufficiently rigorous before moving on to the next stage
Format Matters
It's not just what students say that matters but how they communicate it. To succeed, students must take their knowledge and express it in the language of opportunity.
All Hands
Leverage hand raising to positively impact pacing. Manage and vary the ways that students raise their hands, as well as the methods you use to call on them.
Habits of Discussion
Make your discussions more productive and enjoyable by normalizing a set of ground rules or "habits" that allow discussions to be more efficiently cohesive and connected.
Precise Praise
Make your positive reinforcement strategic. Differentiate between acknowledgment and praise.
Emotional Constancy
Manage your emotions to consistently promote student learning and achievement.
Least Invasive Intervention
Maximize teaching time and minimize "drama" by using the subtlest and least invasive tactic possible to correct off-task students
Work the Clock
Measure time - your greatest resource as a teacher - intentionally, strategically, and often visibly to shape both your and your students' experience in the classroom.
Everybody Writes
Prepare your students to engage rigorously by giving them the chance to reflect in writing before you ask them to discuss.
Radar and Be Seen Looking
Prevent nonproductive behavior by developing your ability to see it when it happens and by subtly reminding students that you are looking
Every Minute Matters
Respect students' time by spending every minute productively
Standardize the Format
Streamline observations by designing materials and space so that you're looking in the same, consistent place every time for the data you need
Firm, Calm, Finesse
Take steps to get compliance without conflict by establishing an environment of purpose and respect and by maintaining your own poise
Habits of Attention
Teach students key baseline behaviours for learning, such as sitting up in class and tracking the speaker, by using a memorable acronym such as STAR. Sit up Track the Speaker Appreciate your classmate's ideas Rephrase the words of the person who spoke
Engineer Efficiency
Teach students the simplest and fastest procedure for executing key classroom tasks, then practice so that executing the procedure becomes a routine.
Stretch It
The sequence of learning does not end with a right answer; reward right answers with a follow-up question that extend the knowledge and test for reliability.
Do Now
Use a short warm-up activity that students can complete without instruction or direction from you to start class every day
What to Do
Use specific, concrete, sequential, and observable directions to tell students what to do, as opposed to what not to do
Break it Down
When a student makes an error, provide just enough help to allow them to "solve" as much of the original problem as they can
Right is Right
When students respond to answers in class, hold out for answers that are "all-the-way right" or all the way to your standards of rigor.
Change the Pace
a change from one activity to something different
Knowledge Organizers
a one-page document that outlines the most important knowledge students need to understand to engage a unit of study
Disciplined Discussion
an effective discussion with a shared purpose and mental model of what it means to discuss something
Phrasing Fundamentals
answer so obvious, it seems rhetorical OR call on students to answer a different question then the one you gave them time to think about
Exemplar Planning
answers that you hope a student will give to your question
Replace Self-Report
asking objective questions where students need to demonstrate their understanding rather than evaluate how well they think they know something
Take the Steps
break down what you are doing into steps (you are an expert, students are still learning)
Silent Solo
not just writing but quiet writing
Retrieval Practice
process of causing students to recall information they've learned after a strategic delay
Make Expectations Visible
the more visible the action you ask students to execute, the easier it is for you to see whether students follow through
Circulate
to move around