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10 Things to Do When You Only Have 5 Minutes Left in Class
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You’ve completed your lessons for the day, but you still have some time left and a group of eager students with nothing productive to do. What can you do in this time to keep your class under control until the bell rings? Here is a list of 10 things to do when you only have 5 minutes left in class.
1. Journal writing:
Have your students write a journal entry to summarize the things that they learned in class that particular day. Make sure they date their entries so that they will have a record of when they wrote in their journals. This is a particular good exercise to help kids reinforce what they learned, as well as provide them with questions that they may have the following day on something they did not understand completely.
2. Conduct a poll:
With only 5 minutes left in class, this is the perfect time to have a poll for the students to vote on. You can use facts to get the kids feelings about whether or not they think something was fair, or list possible responses as ways that the kids would do something different than what actually happened. For instance, when talking about Abraham Lincoln and freeing the slaves, perhaps students would have handled the situation in a different way than Abe.
3. Writing notes:
Students are always writing notes in class, but usually get in trouble when they get caught. This time give permission for kids to write notes, but it has to be a fact that they learned in class and pass it to another student. This way the whole class is getting a fact that they might not have know about the lesson. Collect the notes as students leave the class.
4. The Toilet Paper Game:
This game is a fun way to review what kids learned in class. Because they pick up on the way the game is played very quickly, you will have to change it every time you use it. How it works is that you tell the students to pull off anywhere from 1 to 5 pieces of toilet paper from a roll, but do not tell them the rule of the game until everyone has done so. Then, use the amount of paper each student pulled off to give you that number of facts about the lesson they learned that particular day. For instance, if a student pulls of one piece of the roll, they have to give one fact about the lesson, and so on. The next time you will probably have lots of kids pull off one piece (because they think they are getting off easy), and you will need to switch the rules a bit to catch them off guard.
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pattiann
2 months ago
6 comments
As a Substitute teacher I always have a "bag full" of time killing games that are fun and educational. One game I used recently with great sucess plays out like this. Divide the class into two or more teams. The first team states a letter (I like to write it on the board for all to see). The next team states that letter and adds another. Each team in turn states the previous letters and adds one more letter until a word is spelt. That team earns points for each letter in the word. The next team chooses whether to continue with the exsisting word to form a longer word or to begin fresh. If they continue the team that completes the longer word again earns points for each letter in the word.
I was amazed to listen to the teams conversing about word choices and calculating who would win the word based on the number of letters. I also offered double points if they used a vocabulary word from the lesson.
Olenma
2 months ago
16 comments
Five Minutes left? Great time to do some in class exercise and get your blood flowing again. Some jumping jacks, stretching exercise, running in place etc.
putri
2 months ago
2 comments
Great ideas!
Thanks
senedtra
2 months ago
176 comments
I would use these ideas after the rest of the students' belongings are placed in their back pack or within their reach. I know that I didn't like brisk walking to the opposite side and thinking that I was going to miss the bus. I like the ideas though.
jasonhuttinga
2 months ago
2 comments
You can also just allow the kids to get an early start on their homework!
lsawyer
2 months ago
2 comments
Some of these I have tried and the kids seem to have like liked them. They work for all grade levels.
jeffk
2 months ago
10 comments
I love the ideas....
TheGibson
5 months ago
8 comments
It's also possible (especially in lit classes) that the journal not necessarily be about the lesson. Just the act of getting them into a writing habit would be a huge achievement.
teach313
5 months ago
4 comments
Middle Schoolers would enjoy the "conduct a poll" activity if used with teenage issues of interest.
SBonilla07
5 months ago
588 comments
conducting a poll sounds grat, you get every child's point of view.
pinkdaisygirl81
5 months ago
2 comments
I use the Ticket to Leave (Exit Slip) a lot in my classroom. You can change it up every time too...have students answer or ask a question about the day's lesson, submit their own test question or give a review question from previous lessons!
salliek
5 months ago
2 comments
Great ideas! We don't have enough time to teach everything we need to, so we need to make every minute count.
theta32
5 months ago
4 comments
These are really great ideas.
dupe_26
5 months ago
2 comments
All these are effective and interesting to some extent but in a situation where you have 40 or more pupils in a class like we have in some schools in Nigeria, most of these tips might be ineffective.
bcabonegro
5 months ago
2 comments
yeah, all these are effective and interesting to my learners! they always look forward to a tomorrow's fun-filled day of learning.