Not exact matches
For group
discussions, like Socratic seminars or
fishbowl discussions, group students
in the middle of the classroom.
A teacher can «translate» the game experience to classroom teams through written reflections and
discussions, as well as hands - on gameplay
in a
fishbowl, where the classroom observes and documents elements of successful collaboration.
There are two ways to do that based on the class size and dynamics: one giant circle for all students, or
fishbowl style (where the participants
in an inner circle have a
discussion and the participants
in an outer circle coach the inner circle).
Fishbowl A
Fishbowl is a large group activity where several students participate
in a
discussion while the remaining students (who are usually seated
in a circle surrounding them) observe the conversation.
After the initial
fishbowl discussion phase, a typical Book Club day began with book clubs (
discussion in small groups), followed by community share (whole class
discussion), mini lesson, reading
in groups, and ended with individual writing
in response to prompt questions (open - ended questions designed to engage students
in personal, critical, and creative responses to literature).