Monday, April 6, 2015

Making Points in a Lecture, PEEL




Excellence in Education: Major Points in A Lecture  
I’ve seen several examples of this strategy used by several teachers, and based on a couple of conversations with teachers I’ve had recently I wanted to share it with everyone.

First, please allow me to explain the conversations frequently centered on teacher frustration with students not taking notes during lectures. While we each have different strategies: guided notes, PowerPoint presentations posted on BlackBoard, etc. the simplicity of this strategy works in all instances.


  1. At the beginning of the lecture the teacher briefs the students on the key points of the lecture (somewhere between 3-6 ideas). This, of course, is a great way of sharing the learning target with the students!
  2. Students are then responsible for completing an outline or a graphic organizer (web diagram, chart, etc.) for each of the main points. With younger students, it may be beneficial to discuss ways for students to organize their notes.
  3. After conclusion of each main point, students may be given time to jot down key ideas, to think-pair-share, for formative assessment, etc.


Excellence in Education: PEEL Graphic Organizer  
A highly rigorous, college-prep class requires students to analyze and support their analysis with facts and reasoning. The PEEL strategy is a graphic organizer that can be used by itself, as a pre-writing strategy (especially DBQs and other shorter, social studies essays), in preparation for a class discussion/Socratic Seminar, or more. Simply, it’s a great way to get students started because it helps them determine a main idea and find supporting details.

What is PEEL?
PEEL stands for Point-Evidence-Explanation-Link

Point: provide an opening statement for your argument
Evidence: provide evidence (this can be direct quotes, facts, etc.)
Explanation: explain the evidence through purpose and context
Link: a statement that links back to the main point


Administrative Notes
Hall Coverage: We must do a better job of being in the hallways before school, between classes, and after school. àThis is a blanket (shotgun-type) statement that I try to avoid, but I feel comfortable making it because I’ve tried to thank teachers who I consistently see in the hallway. It really needs to improve! In addition to being a student safety issue, I’ve blogged about other reasons to greet students at the door http://goo.gl/kMh3xA We understand that things come up at the end of the class and that often you need to prepare something for your next class, but please make a concerted effort to be in the hallways. Thanks!

Flex tomorrow.

Learning Walks on Wednesday.

Open enrollment meeting : Thursday

Positive Referral Link: http://goo.gl/s0KXRB

Work Order Request Form: http://goo.gl/H7hFwK


Some upcoming dates:
April 18: Prom (Chaperones needed)
April 30: Honor Breakfast (Top Decile)
May 17: Scholarship Banquet
May 18: Senior Picnic
May 26/27: Now sent in stone: Senior Exams
May 29 @ 6pm: Graduation

Some upcoming edcamps (opt-out credit can be earned):
May 9: Edcamp MetroDC (Potomac, MD)
April 18: Edcamp Delaware (Wilmington)


Worth Your Time
Support Struggling Students and Help Them Develop Better Attitudes : An article from Robyn Jackson, author of Work Smarter, Not Harder, including some good tips about redos, retakes and instilling a growth mindset.
Three Simple Ways to Differentiate Instruction While differentiation might be the theme of the article, it really includes great instructional ideas that transcend beyond differentiation.


What the ‘thoughtless’ New York Government Just Did to Teachers : Be glad you’re not in NY, even though they pay well.

No comments:

Post a Comment