Brainwriting
Brainwriting
is an alternative to brainstorming that involves having group members interact
via reading and writing rather than speaking and listening. Brainwriting typically involves the following
steps:
1.) Identify a topic or subject
that students will be studying (One time that I used this strategy was
completing a review for a test and final exam).
2.) Assign students to a group
of no more than four members.
3.) On that topic, have students
write/answer what they know or think they know about a topic or subject for a
given period (five minutes is a good starting point)
4.) When time is up, have
students pass their writings or responses to a set of questions to another
group.
a. When I did this strategy
with a review, I gave each group a master copy and then divided the questions
up. As we passed around the activity
students would work at answering the questions missed by the previous
group. At the conclusion, the review
should be filled out and as a teacher you know which ones no students were
comfortable with.
5.) Assign a little bit of time
for students to review the previous group’s work and groups should add in what
they know about the writing or questions being asked.
6.) Repeat steps 4 and 5 until
all students in a group have reviewed each other’s work. Each group should then review all the ideas
and answers generated through this process.
- You could easily do this activity with any book work or worksheet that
you are assigning to your students and divide up the problems based on the
number of groups.
- If you are having students read primary documents or short stories, the
students could write their responses to questions or prompts and help other
students with comprehending what the readings are about. This activity could be done with Reading ACT
test preps
- Science teachers could use this to share
hypothesis and experiment results so that they can compare any differences or
similarities.
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