Tuesday, October 18, 2016

What Does Lesson Closure Include?

Last week's Teaching Tip was an introduction to lesson closures, which we compared to "sticking the landing" as a gymnast.  You were given some end-of-lesson strategies or formative assessments to incorporate into your lesson closures. Here is the link to that Teaching Tip in case you would like to reread it.

This week we continue with the concept of closure. Ann Sipe of Grandview School District created a handout entitled "Lesson Closure with Examples, or 40 Ways to Leave a Lesson."  You can read her entire handout, along with 40 formative assessment/closure activities here.

We have also captured some of Sipe's great ideas below and added a few of our own:

What is Lesson Closure?

  • what the instructor does to wrap up the lesson in a meaningful way and smoothly transition to the next lesson
  • a quick review to remind students what they have learned (or should have learned) in terms of meeting the learning target. This works best when students are doing the thinking, not when the instructor is summarizes for them
  • a part of the lesson that includes formative assessment to tell you:
    • how well students have met your learning target, can summarize main ideas, can evaluate class processes, can answer questions posed at the beginning of the period, and can link to past and future learning
    • if additional practice is needed
    • whether you need to re-teach the concepts or skill, or can move on to new learning
  • not complete without student self-assessment and reflection against the learning target and success criteria
  • an opportunity for students to draw conclusions, connect learning to past learning or personal experiences, make inferences, ask questions, deepen their understanding of concepts, and begin to draw connections to upcoming lessons
  • something you can do in five minutes
  • something that takes place at the end of the learning target, which may or may not be at the end of the period

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