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Lazy Teacher

The document provides 10 tips for teachers to involve students more actively in their own learning process. This includes having students help each other by answering questions on a help desk, self-evaluating their work, designing tests and marking schemes, identifying topics they want or need to cover, and taking responsibility for group roles and presentations. The goal is to make students more independent thinkers by gradually transferring responsibilities to them.

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Xiao Maybelle
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
567 views1 page

Lazy Teacher

The document provides 10 tips for teachers to involve students more actively in their own learning process. This includes having students help each other by answering questions on a help desk, self-evaluating their work, designing tests and marking schemes, identifying topics they want or need to cover, and taking responsibility for group roles and presentations. The goal is to make students more independent thinkers by gradually transferring responsibilities to them.

Uploaded by

Xiao Maybelle
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Jim Smith and Independent Thinking Ltd 2009

1. Set up a Help Desk where students can post and find answers to questions. That way you
wont be bothered 20 times with the same question!
2. Get students to mark and evaluate work based on how much it made them think. Students
who think about thinking will learn a lot.
3. Ask students to design and write the test that they then do next lesson. Place emphasis
on question style to develop awareness of command words in questions so it looks like
you did it.
4. Yes! Youve guessed it! They then mark their own tests as they have also written the mark
scheme!
5. Ask students to write down five things they dont know about a new topic. They then
Bring and Buy questions and answers. Plan your remaining lessons on what the students
want and need to know.
6. End a lesson by asking students to write down five things that they are annoyed that they
still dont know about the topic. (After all, it must be frustrating if you never get asked
what you want to know!)
7. Get the students to set the outcome for the next lesson based on what they have done in
the current lesson. This could be content or skills.
8. In group work ensure they all have roles and responsibilities over and above the task. Why
should you be the one hunting for the glue stick when the bell has gone?
9. Ridiculously Rapid Revision ask each group to take a topic and deliver a two-minute
presentation on it. It could be live or pre-recorded. Put the films and podcasts on your
departmental website. Take credit for the best ones.
10. Finally, share with them your philosophy on being lazy but great. Students need to
understand what you believe in before they can deliver the results.
For more information and to find out how Jim Smith and Independent Thinking can help you be
lazy but great simply call us on 0709 239 9617 or e-mail us on learn@independentthinking.co.uk

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