Celebrate Excellence in Education: Nominate Outstanding Educators by April 15!
1. Have absolutely no plan ready when the internet fails, the motherboard on the classroom computer dies (yes, that happened right at the start of a lesson), or there is a power outage. Instead, have at least three back up lesson plans that you can use at any stage in the year regardless of where you are in the syllabus. Have the materials prepared, enough handouts, etc. and just move straight into it seamlessly - don't let them (the students) see your fear - they will feed off it!
Here are my go-to options for Economics (most are useful for Business Studies, Social Studies, Geography, etc):
2. Spend ages trying to find a particular app or tool to use in/with Canvas but only using 'classroom' or 'T&L' search parameters. One of the best tools I used this year was designed for use in conference to get audience participation - tools may be out there under different guises - look wider afield.
3. Try to fill lessons with impromptu timed essays - there is far too much marking involved, especially if they don't learn to peer- or self-assess. Get them trained from the start to judge their work and that of others: don't accept that they only want your opinion as the expert - get them ready to recognise good work from bad.
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10 Skills: Economics, Business Studies, Writing, East Coast Swing Dance, Eating Nutella, Dressmaking, Creating the World's Best Salads, Auto-marked Quizzes LGBTQ Awareness
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