I'm jumping in a little late in the game, but I found an awesome Linky party to join up with this summer! The Appleicious Teacher is hosting a linky every week about sharing different parts of your classroom.
This week's focus is whole group instruction.
Let's face it. This is the most common time you'll see in classrooms around the globe. While recent studies, research, and the swing of the pendulum have put more focus on small group instruction, whole group is where it's at. There's hardly any avoiding it. I know when I walk through our halls, this is what I see 90% of the time. Old school whole group is kids sitting at their desks in rows while copying things from the board or completing a worksheet or workbook page. It's so easy to spice up your whole group time and get the students actively engaged. This can be such a fun time for them! It brings your class together as a little community of human beings that are delving into information together, picking each other's brains, and offering up what they already know.
Fortunately, I have pictures of a typical whole-group reading lesson. These were from an insect unit we did toward the end of the school year.
The first thing we do is formulate a schema chart together. I usually draw something up in advance on butcher paper and hang it on the board. It stays up all week, or longer if needed. I give the students sticky notes and they write what they already know about the topic at hand. I usually limit them, only because they see what their neighbor writes and they think, "Oh, I know that, too!" Or they keep thinking of E.V.E.R.Y.T.H.I.N.G. I usually tell them to write their best 2 or 3 facts. Then they go up and put them on the schema chart.
Then we go through and share what we already know. After that, we head to the carpet and I typically read some sort of read-aloud to them about our unit that week. I always try to get a good mix of fiction and non-fiction in our read-aloud time. We also do whole-group mini-lessons on our Promethean board. This is usually focused around phonics. This is the new carpet we got through Donor's Choose!
I try to do a fun craft or activity at least once a week. I wish I had MORE time to do things like this, but you know how it goes. ;) This was an activity from Deanna Jump's Insect Unit. I put a picture of a basic insect on the board and we went through and labeled the different parts. Their job was to use fun snacks to make their own bug! They turned out SO cute!
We also did Deanna's cute glyph activity.
This next activity was honestly a quick, spur of the moment idea. I had such a creative class this past year and I knew that this would be something they would enjoy. I quickly had them pair up and took one person from each group down to get butcher paper. Their job was to create their own insect. They had to choose a name for it and write something about it. Then they shared them with the class. I love being able to pair them up for a quick activity like this!
That's about how my whole group looks like during the week. Mondays are usually jam-packed with background building, Tuesdays are background and learning new reading skills, Wednesdays are reading the story together (we sit on the perimeter of the carpet and read together), and Thursdays are a review with more games and activities. I love seeing what they can do together!
One thing I am SO excited about adding next year is a document camera that we received through Donor's Choose! I can't WAIT for it to come in! :)
So there we have it. The basic gist of whole group instruction in my classroom.
Next week I'll be back to talk about small group instruction! Have a fabulous week!!!!