Every veteran teacher understands that the first few minutes of a class set the tone for the rest of the period. This is why most schools insist on some form of the warm-up (also called bell ringer or do-now) for students to complete at the beginning of the period. New teachers may have experienced this during student teaching, but do not understand all the reasons why it becomes an important part of the classroom routine.
Why is a Warm-Up So Important?
*A daily warm-up for the first crucial five minutes actually serves several purposes:
*It sets the tone for the class. Utilizing the first five minutes says to the class “We have work to do. Our time is important”.
*It creates an automatic routine for students. Students who are struggling need routines to lower their stress levels.
*It gives students some continuity and automaticity: This is especially important for
*It gives the teacher time to take attendance or deal with
*Students have a bridge from the lesson yesterday to today. Teachers can also see who remembers the important concepts from the day before.
*Absent students who missed the lesson yesterday can review the content. They have time to get a little help from other students or the teacher.
*A warm-up can preview the lesson for the current day. Sometimes the current lesson is a continuation of the previous day.
*The teacher can informally assess student understanding. I will know what I need to review and how many students just did not remember. It keeps me from moving on and leaving students behind.
*Warm-ups provide a transition from students changing class to get ready to learn. At my school students have 7 minutes to get from one class to another. They are energetic and need some transition to settle down and refocus.
Checking a Warm-Up and Grading
The way teachers have students complete a warm-up and check it vary with the teacher. I have worked as a mentor teacher for the last 10 years. During that time I have seen variations and each year I probably change my routine slightly as well (I actually dislike most routines, but recognize their importance in the classroom). Some teachers have students write the daily activity in their notebook and check the notebook weekly. Others have individual half-sheets of paper printed with the problem and pass out/collect and grade daily.
And there is also a variety of ways that teachers give feedback. Some just post the answers when the time is up so students can check their own work. Others assign a grade and write it in the notebook or return those half sheets with comments. Other teachers review the warm up with students and some have students share their answers with the class. All of these are good methods.
Using a Form
In the past I used a form for the week, but check the problems daily. In previous years, I used the same form but printed it double-sided so students would use the same form for two weeks. Students were disorganized and many lost the form before the two weeks was up. I have also tried collecting the form daily and holding it for students, but this creates a paper nightmare for me (I do not need any more paper).
Grading is not an issue, it takes about 2 minutes. I ask the students to pass the papers forward, I check them quickly and mark them with a happy or sad face and pass back. At the end of the
To Grade or Not to Grade
Sometimes I put them in the gradebook, sometimes I do not. Either way, the results of these warm-ups give me valuable information about my students and have actually demonstrated several things to students. One of my students (a junior repeating Algebra) remarked “This class is so easy. If I just do the warm-up every day, I can do better on the quizzes and tests”.
Yes, that is the goal. I can see that students who are not doing well are the same students who consistently will not complete a warm-up. Doing this daily practice or review does translate to performing better on assessments which in turn motivates students to keep working.
Earlier this semester there was a concern from administration that students who had missed the warm-up did not have a way to “makeup” the credit. Now that we are at the end of the semester I can verify that this has not been an issue. Students who are chronically absent will have lower grades, but not because they missed the warm-up. Our daily work only counts for only 20% of student grades. The rest is assessment and
Finding Resources for Warm-Ups
In my quest to save time and work I have even purchased several sets of warm-ups from different places. However, even though the resources were good, they did not cover the material in the same order. Some had no space for the students to write, some used a lot of word problems (I have a lot of students who are struggling with English) and some just required a lot of extra work from me to use.
I finally used resources from our book, copying problems to a power point slide to project. Sometimes I use practice problems from the day before that they students have already seen (they do not remember). Sometimes it is a question and I ask students to respond. After Thanksgiving I asked students what they had for Thanksgiving dinner. It helped me understand my students a little better.
Last year I began using Google Forms for the warm up. The benefit was that I got immediate results and could adjust my teaching. Grading was much easier and students were able to complete faster. This gives students feedback as well if you use the settings to allow students to check their answers.
When I have traveled to different conferences I love talking to teachers about their routines in the classroom. What works, what does not. If you have a routine–either for a warm-up or something else, drop me a comment below or send me an email at bluemountainmath@gmail.com. I would love to hear about different activities to implement.
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