A self-debate began, as I wondered if it would be effective in the classroom to enhance instruction by creating opportunity for collaboration between students and teachers, or if it would backfire a allow students to distract from the learning of classmates. The potential for usage problems exist, but with effective classroom management and well-established classroom expectations, students will use the tool as it is intended.
This past week, I used TodaysMeet as an accompaniment to other active reading strategies. Students were directed to post questions, comments, interesting ideas, and highlights to the TodaysMeet Room as they completed a supplementary reading assignment to the room. They were encouraged to extend thinking by responding to other student's ideas as they finished.
The final component of the lesson, had students respond to the essential question using the backchannel. A student could gauge the responses of his/her classmates and formulate a better/more complete answer to the question.
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