27 Ways to Flip Your Classroom

The traditional model of teachers lecturing in the classroom and students completing practice and homework on their own is changing. Instead, students are learning on their own and using the classroom as a place to dig more deeply into what they’ve learned. This model, known as the flipped classroom, is gaining popularity thanks to the rise of EdTech.
How does the flipped classroom work? Students watch lecture videos or complete readings at home. The following day in class, the teacher clarifies anything students didn’t understand. Students then collaborate with the information to answer questions, complete projects and do other activities that used to be reserved for homework.
The flipped classroom provides benefits for students and teachers alike. Teachers spend more time helping students with the content they don’t understand. This means more one-on-one help for students and less time listening to boring lectures in class.
If you are struggling to find ways to flip your classroom, the graphic below can definitely get you going. It lists 27 ways to flip your classroom.
[…] this is simply not true. Teachers can flip the classroom for one lecture or for an entire semester. They can decide whether or not a specific section […]
[…] have to work on activities that require higher learning levels outside of the classroom. With the flipped classroom model, however, things are […]