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Are Your Students Escape Artists?

5/20/2015

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Always on the search for new ways to motivate students to read carefully and closely, I decided to craft a lesson about being an escape artist. Two recent experiences inspired this lesson - a trip to the awesome Denver Escape Room and a visit to a Houdini museum exhibit in Appleton, WI. 


Students were "locked" into Room 1, our first Google doc. In order to escape, they had to read this document and answer the questions (questions represented the lowest two levels of Bloom's Taxonomy.) If they answered correctly, they were given a code by the teacher (a tiny url) that would get them into Room 2. Again, they had to read text and answer questions, this time from the two middle levels of Bloom's Taxonomy. If correct, they received the code to get into Room 3 where they encountered a high level challenge based on our recent energy unit. 


Check out and download the documents here.
Escape Room 1
Escape Room 2
Escape Room 3


Because escape artists usually have time constraints, we projected a visual timer on the board and gave students 40 minutes to try to escape all three rooms. Individual accommodations were made for a few students (text to speech, visual highlighting of key sections, etc.) and an extra challenge for early finishers.

Motivation and engagement was very high. However, we also had students who were highly frustrated. (Most of the mistakes came from rushing or not attending to details.) This led to great conversation with students about the need for persistence in the face of difficulty. 

The structure worked really well and my co-teachers and I are already planning on designing more of these for next year. We will try to use text and questions that we already have, rather than creating from scratch like I did with this lesson. As student skills progress during the year, the escapes can become more challenging.

If any of my supremely tech savvy followers can think of a way to do this even more seamlessly, please let me know!
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Creating Questions

5/12/2015

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We want students to be able to answer high level questions, but we also want them to create these types of questions. If your students need a little help doing this, try using a Create A Question bag.

I developed question stems from  the top three levels of Bloom's Taxonomy. These are generic enough that they can be used with almost any content. Then I cut them up and placed some into each of several bags. Each team was given a bag and every student was to reach in and select a question. They had a few minutes to generate a question based on our lesson, write it down on a blank strip of paper and place it into the teacher's bag. 


Original Stem


What type of people would be on your team to solve...
became
What type of people would be on your team to solve the energy crisis?

We then randomly chose student questions to read aloud and answer. Students were highly engaged and excited to answer their peers' questions. Simple and reusable!

Download the questions here. I shrunk the font and spacing on this version, but added much more space for the ones given to students. 


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Memory Journey

5/5/2015

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I recently finished reading Moonwalking with Einstein, by Joshua Foer. This book recounts the author’s year long quest to improve his memory by participating in the USA Memory Championship. The journey is fascinating and includes disclosure of the strategies that champions use to remember huge amounts of information. The most common is often referred to as the Memory Palace technique. In this technique, a person uses a familiar room or rooms in a building and journeys through the space, linking key facts to locations in the room.

We decided to teach students how to use this technique to process and retain information from their science text. We had students begin by drawing an outline of their bedrooms. As we read through each paragraph, we stopped and discussed key points, and then directed them to place the information somewhere in their room, using words and drawings.

The following day we asked students to recreate their bedroom drawing, recalling as many features of it as possible. Their recall was impressive!

How do you use visual representations to assist students in understanding and remembering their new concepts?


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    Anne M. Beninghof

    Anne's mission is to improve instruction through collaboration and the sharing of creative, practical ideas for educators.

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