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The race to the front quiz – a lesson idea

This quiz review has never failed to get everyone engaged in a lesson. (Image from https://www.maxpixel.net).

I love the first 5-10 minutes of lessons as I think it’s a really important time to do a number of things that can have a real impact on the rest of the lesson. In our CHACER lesson model, this is the first C – Consolidation.

This post will outline one of my favourite consolidation activities – the race to the front quiz. But before we outline the basics, let’s review three main goals of a good consolidation activity:

  1. Energy and enthusiasm: you want to start the lesson out in a fun and engaging way that gets students engaged and energetic. Adding a bit of a competitive element is great for this.
  2. Review: it can’t just be about fun, though. A good consolidation requires students actively thinking about what they’ve been learning and spending some time rehearsing the information to help ensure the knowledge is consolidated.
  3.  Formative assessment: last (and definitely least) is the fact that we want to gauge how our students are progressing with the content and ideally plug any gaps in knowledge. I say this is the least important because it’s the hardest to implement.

The Race to the Front Quiz

  1. Write ten review questions on a PowerPoint and add animations so they appear one at a time. The questions should progress in difficulty (easy to difficult), but should be answerable in short answers (e.g. one word or phrase).
  2. Group students in pairs or threes, with one designated runner, one reader, and one writer.
  3. Each group has a piece of paper with the numbers 1-10 written down the side.
  4. When the question appears the reader reads it to their group, they all discuss the answer, the writer writes it down and the runner races to the front to show the teacher the answer. If they’re correct, the next question gets projected.
  5. The first team to get through all ten questions wins.
  6. After it’s finished, go through the answers as a class.

This is an example slide from our Love and Marriage Unit.

Tips

The late, great Paul Ginnis’ mantra when talking about lesson activities was “the devil is in the details” and boy is he right. This activity has never failed me to get everyone engaged and excited at the start of a lesson, but there are a few details that help:

I think every TSP we’ve produced has at least one Race-to-the-Front quiz, so you can find examples in there.

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