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Start these 3 classroom habits ASAP!

By Pooja K. Agarwal, Ph.D.

Arguably, the best habits are the ones we don’t think about. Start early and practice them often.

Here are 3 learning habits to establish in your classroom ASAP and more retrieval practice activities you should incorporate right now. Don’t wait until later in the semester — students already have a lot to remember and retrieve.

One thing I’m excited about: My college is finally switching to Canvas. Email me with your favorite Canvas tips and tricks, and good luck on the start of the school year!

Photo credit: Keira Burton via Pexels

Three classroom habits to start ASAP

Habit #1 (this isn’t related to retrieval practice; it’s just a personal favorite): Enable live captions or subtitles on Google Slides and Powerpoint! This is really easy, it supports universal design principles, and it improves accessibility for all students. There is some emerging research that captions and subtitles improve learning and motivation, too.

During presentation mode in Google Slides, the Mac keyboard shortcut is ⌘ + Shift + c (click for more info for Google Slides). During presentation mode in PowerPoint, simply press the letter J (click for more info for PowerPoint). I recommend positioning the subtitles at the top of the projection screen. Keep in mind that the captions are more accurate the closer you stand to your computer (I also use a bluetooth microphone in all my classes). The live captions might be distracting at first, but my students have given me very positive feedback!

Habit #2: Engage students in a brain dump or two things as an entry ticket or exit ticket. Spend one minute or less having students write down everything (or just two things) they remember from class. The key: Don’t grade it! Keep retrieval practice no-stakes to emphasize it’s a learning strategy, not an assessment strategy.

Habit #3: Always make time for the “think” step in think-pair-share. We often skip the think step, but that’s when the magic of retrieval practice takes place, before the pair and share.

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Retrieval practice activities for the first day of class

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More resources and recent press


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