<p></p><p>Collation of all ideas from the recent thread on this - thanks to all contributors. Lots of ideas for new teachers, new ideas for more experienced colleagues.</p><p></p>
I created this PowerPoint so that my department could go through the key elements during the first week back with Yr 10 to introduce the course and the new GCSE Edexcel requirements.
<p>Pair/group work. One reads through the sheet, choosing one option from each bubble. When finished - partner has to read back choosing correct remembered option - points for each correct answer. Then swap over, then choose a different partner. This technique commits well to memory.</p>
<p>Pair/group work. One reads through the sheet, choosing one option from each bubble. When finished - partner has to read back choosing correct remembered option - points for each correct answer. Then swap over, then choose a different partner. This technique commits well to memory.</p>
<p>Pair/group work. One reads through the sheet, choosing one option from each bubble. When finished - partner has to read back choosing correct remembered option - points for each correct answer. Then swap over, then choose a different partner. This technique commits well to memory.</p>
<p>Pair/group work. One reads through the sheet, choosing one option from each bubble. When finished - partner has to read back choosing correct remembered option - points for each correct answer. Then swap over, then choose a different partner. This technique commits well to memory.</p>
<p>Pair/group work. One reads through the sheet, choosing one option from each bubble. When finished - partner has to read back choosing correct remembered option - points for each correct answer. Then swap over, then choose a different partner. This technique commits well to memory.</p>
<p>Pair/group work. One reads through the sheet, choosing one option from each bubble. When finished - partner has to read back choosing correct remembered option - points for each correct answer. Then swap over, then choose a different partner. This technique commits well to memory.</p>