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Starting Point-Teaching Entry Level Geoscience > Interactive Lectures > What is Interactive Lecture? > Think-Pair-Share
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Think-Pair-Share

Ask your students to get together in pairs. If need be, have some of the students move. If you have an odd number of students, allow one group of three. It's important to have small groups so that each student can talk. Open-ended questions are more likely to generate more discussion.

  1. Ask a question.
  2. Give students a minute to two (longer for more complicated questions) to discuss the question and work out an answer.
  3. Ask for responses from some or all of the pairs.


Examples of think-pair-share questions include:

You can use the student responses as a basis for discussion, to motivate a lecture segment, and to obtain feedback about what your students know or are thinking.

Write-pair-share, a variation of think-pair-share, gives students a chance to write down their answer before discussing it with their neighbor. You may wish to collect written responses from each student or each pair before or after discussing the answer.

Advantages of the think-pair-share technique are that

You can do think-pair-share activities once or several times during a given class period

References and Further Reading

Lyman, F., 1987, Think-Pair-Share: An expanding teaching technique: MAA-CIE Cooperative News, v. 1, p. 1-2.

King, 1993 , From Sage on the Stage to Guide on the Side, College Teaching v. 41 no. 1 p. 30-35

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