32 min

From The Archives: Getting Started With Station-Based Learning - E102 The EduGals Podcast

    • How To

This week, we are chatting all about station-based learning. This instructional model is frequently used at the elementary level, so our focus for this conversation is how to implement station-based learning in the secondary classroom.

If you like what you hear, we would love it if you could share this episode with a colleague or friend. And make sure you subscribe so that you don’t miss out on any new content! And consider supporting the show by buying us a coffee or two!

We would love to hear from you – leave a comment on our website OR check out our FLIPGRID!

Featured Content
**For detailed show notes, please visit our website at https://edugals.com/102**
There are many different ways to set up stations - by activity, by curriculum strandCan be done over a day, several days, or even a weekCatlin Tucker - Blended Learning in Action book and Balance with Blended Learning bookStation Rotation Model:Teacher-led, small group work, individual practice, online learning, collaborative stationsDoesn't need to be physical locations in your room although this can help your students stay on task!Other ideas for stations: makerspace, research, project-based learning, design & create, virtual field trips, role playing &/or performance, feedbackFeedback station suggestions:Peer review, teacher led, self assessmentProvide sentence starters and/or frameworks to guide peer and self assessmentBehind the scenes:Lots of upfront work with a big payoffConsider approaching the topic using different modalitiesThink about those topics that students often struggle with to target for stationsHelp students learn the model by starting with low stakes stations (getting to know you activities for example)Consider interactions: teacher-student, student-student, student-contentHave clear objectives, tasks, instructionsWorks well with mastery-based learningMix up the activities you useLook at UDL framework for inspirationLogistics in the classroom:Limit the number of students per stationUse a timer and project it to keep students on taskIt's ok not to finish all tasksConsider lesson classifications from Modern Classrooms frameworkAdd in a fun station (curriculum-related board games, etc.)Tech vs no-tech - not all stations need tech!If using tech, consider all aspects - headphones, headphone splitters, chromebooks, adaptersExpect a learning curve - try, fail, learn!Support the show
Connect with EduGals:
Twitter @EduGals Rachel @dr_r_johnson Katie @KatieAttwell EduGals Website Support the show

This week, we are chatting all about station-based learning. This instructional model is frequently used at the elementary level, so our focus for this conversation is how to implement station-based learning in the secondary classroom.

If you like what you hear, we would love it if you could share this episode with a colleague or friend. And make sure you subscribe so that you don’t miss out on any new content! And consider supporting the show by buying us a coffee or two!

We would love to hear from you – leave a comment on our website OR check out our FLIPGRID!

Featured Content
**For detailed show notes, please visit our website at https://edugals.com/102**
There are many different ways to set up stations - by activity, by curriculum strandCan be done over a day, several days, or even a weekCatlin Tucker - Blended Learning in Action book and Balance with Blended Learning bookStation Rotation Model:Teacher-led, small group work, individual practice, online learning, collaborative stationsDoesn't need to be physical locations in your room although this can help your students stay on task!Other ideas for stations: makerspace, research, project-based learning, design & create, virtual field trips, role playing &/or performance, feedbackFeedback station suggestions:Peer review, teacher led, self assessmentProvide sentence starters and/or frameworks to guide peer and self assessmentBehind the scenes:Lots of upfront work with a big payoffConsider approaching the topic using different modalitiesThink about those topics that students often struggle with to target for stationsHelp students learn the model by starting with low stakes stations (getting to know you activities for example)Consider interactions: teacher-student, student-student, student-contentHave clear objectives, tasks, instructionsWorks well with mastery-based learningMix up the activities you useLook at UDL framework for inspirationLogistics in the classroom:Limit the number of students per stationUse a timer and project it to keep students on taskIt's ok not to finish all tasksConsider lesson classifications from Modern Classrooms frameworkAdd in a fun station (curriculum-related board games, etc.)Tech vs no-tech - not all stations need tech!If using tech, consider all aspects - headphones, headphone splitters, chromebooks, adaptersExpect a learning curve - try, fail, learn!Support the show
Connect with EduGals:
Twitter @EduGals Rachel @dr_r_johnson Katie @KatieAttwell EduGals Website Support the show

32 min