Five Ways to Start Your Lessons (2024)

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Five Ways to Start Your Lessons (1)

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April 19, 2021

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Gretchen Vierstra

2 Min

Attention getters, do nows, morning meetings, hugs, and high fives. These are often the ways teachers start their days. By now, you probably have your routines in place for how you start your day or class period. But sometimes it’s good to mix it up. Or maybe you’re looking for an exciting entrance to a specific lesson plan. Just like writers, teachers often need a hook!

Whether you’re mixing it up or just curious about what other teachers do, check out these five videos to see five different ways teachers start their lessons.

1. Start with a Video

Everyone loves a good video, especially kids. Video can be a great way to pique interest or teach a simple concept before a lesson. In the video,Coding in the Algebra Classroom, high school teacher Joshua Kwon starts his lesson with a clip from a car racing video game. He hopes by asking his students to watch and wonder about something familiar to many of them, he can warm up their brains for the math concepts in his lesson, where they’ll be creating their own computer animations.

2. Start with an Object

Another way to get your students wondering about a topic is to show them objects related to the content. Ready to do some creative writing? Inspire them with sensory objects. Getting ready to read a book? Show them objects from the book and ask them to make connections, predictions, or ask questions. You could bring in actual objects for students to touch and smell, or simply show a set of images. InScaffolds for Critical Thinking, Sarah Brown Wessling opens a mystery box filled with photos before starting a challenging lesson with a class of fourth graders. Watch as she uses this box to create an environment that encourages her students to be curious.

3. Start with a Question

Find out what your students already know or think about a topic with a question. There are so many ways to do this: ask the whole class, encourage small group discussions, write it on the board and ask students to do a quick write, or try using a poll. To see a poll in action, watchUsing Technology to Boost Confidence from the Teaching Channel video library. In this video, high school teacher Johanna Paraiso explains how she uses technology to build communication skills in her class, including warming up her students for academic discussions with polls usingGoogle Forms. No matter which method you try, questions are a great way to get your students thinking.

4. Start with Movement

Have an early class of tired high schoolers? Are your 1st graders squirmy after lunch? Get them on their feet with Sarah Brown Wessling’sStand Up Game.For this strategy, you start your lesson with a question, but the twist is that you get everyone on their feet to answer it. Students are able to sit down when they share their answer with the class. Take two minutes to watch this fun idea and then give it a try yourself.

5. Start with a Mistake

Make learning from mistakes a natural part of your daily lessons. Next time you’re thinking of starting off your lesson with an exemplar, consider what could be learned by sharing student work that’s not quite perfect. Take a look atMy Favorite Noto see how Leah Alcala begins her lesson with a brief formative assessment activity and uses it as an opportunity to teach her students to learn from their mistakes. And for more ways to begin your lessons with formative assessment, be sure to check out ourFormative Assessment Deep Divewhich is filled with ideas for you to explore.

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Teaching Channel’s best-in-class video library allows you to watch, learn, and grow by observing a broad range of approaches and a diverse array of teachers in their classrooms.With over 1,600 videos spanning popular topic areas such as English Language Arts, Math, Science, Social Studies, English Language Learners, Class Culture, Differentiation, and more, you’ll always find new opportunities for professional learning. Plus, we’re constantly adding new videos, so you’ll always have access to the most current, innovative, and effective teaching practices.

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Five Ways to Start Your Lessons (2024)

FAQs

What is the 5 parts of lesson plan? ›

The five steps involved are the Anticipatory Set, Introduction of New Material, Guided Practice, Independent Practice and Closure.

What is the best way to start a lesson? ›

Start with a Question

Find out what your students already know or think about a topic with a question. There are so many ways to do this: ask the whole class, encourage small group discussions, write it on the board and ask students to do a quick write, or try using a poll.

How do I start my first lesson? ›

Introduce yourself, pointing at the board where your name is written, and then either call out students' names in turn, or walk around, pointing at them and asking, “And you are?” Depending how successful the beginning is, you may spend a few seconds on telling them that this is your first lesson of English, too.

What is the 5 as approach in teaching? ›

The five major steps to intervention are the "5 A's": Ask, Advise, Assess, Assist, and Arrange.

What are the five 5 steps in the mastery approach in instructions? ›

Five Big Ideas in Teaching for Mastery
  1. Coherence. ...
  2. Representation and Structure. ...
  3. Mathematical Thinking. ...
  4. Fluency. ...
  5. Variation.

What are the 5 objectives of a lesson plan? ›

To give students a clear understanding of where they are headed, well-written learning objectives should be Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Result-oriented, and Time-bound (SMART).

What are the five objectives of a lesson plan? ›

Ideally lesson objectives should be SMART: Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relative and Timely. Only at the end of the lesson, or series of lessons, will you know for sure if your lesson objective was specific enough to be measured through some form of assessment.

What are the 4 A's of lesson planning? ›

The 4As lesson plan focuses on four key components: Aim, Activate, Acquire, and Apply. It emphasizes setting clear objectives, engaging students through activities, providing opportunities for practice and application, and assessing student learning.

What are the 7 steps to a lesson? ›

The basic lesson plan outline given below contains the direct instruction element: 1) objectives, 2) standards, 3) anticipatory set, 4) teaching [input, modeling, and check for understanding], 5) guided practice, 6) closure, and 7) independent practice.

What makes a lesson successful? ›

So what is an effective lesson? To be effective, a lesson has to include clear, easy to follow instructions; it has to have a clear objective—what we want students to walk away having learned or understood; and it has to be engaging enough to keep students interested and participating throughout.

What is a good lesson plan? ›

Lesson plans should always be Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic, and Time-bound. Start with identifying what you want your students to learn and identify different ways to achieve that at the end of class. The lesson objectives will guide the teaching method, learning activities, and assessment.

What makes a good lesson starter? ›

Starter activities tend to be most effective when they: • engage all pupils; • establish pace; • provide challenge. Informed judgements about engagement, pace and challenge call for the consideration of many aspects of teaching and learning.

What a teacher should do before starting a lesson? ›

Before Class: Steps for preparing a lesson plan
  • Identify the learning objectives. ...
  • Plan the specific learning activities. ...
  • Plan to assess student understanding. ...
  • Plan to sequence the lesson in an engaging and meaningful manner. ...
  • Create a realistic timeline. ...
  • Plan for a lesson closure.

What is the first stage of a lesson? ›

The first phase is an introduction or starter activity, which includes the presentation of the learning objectives for that lesson. In the second phase, the teacher presents new information about the topic, possibly demonstrating a skill, or developing learners' knowledge.

What are the parts of a lesson plan? ›

The most effective lesson plans have six key parts:

Lesson Materials. Lesson Procedure. Assessment Method. Lesson Reflection.

What are the main components of a lesson plan? ›

A good daily lesson plan will include at least the following:
  • Introduction. The beginning of the lesson should engage the students' attention and focus on the topic. ...
  • Lesson development. Teachers should make students aware of the intended learning outcomes of the lesson. ...
  • Assessment activities. ...
  • Wrap up:

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