Knowledge revision quizzes
I don't honestly remember who inspired this format - but whoever you are on the EduTwitterverse, thanks!
This was an attempt to have some quiz-style questions which covered most of the CIE IGCSE History course. Other GCSE courses do some similar topics, and some do different ones; I am sharing this here if you wish to make your own.
I have used these questions as lesson starters or as a short test to consolidate a unit. This is partly inspired by the excellent work of Kate Jones and her work on "Retrieval Practice"; I'll write more about this in a future blog post, but in sum the idea is this:
This was an attempt to have some quiz-style questions which covered most of the CIE IGCSE History course. Other GCSE courses do some similar topics, and some do different ones; I am sharing this here if you wish to make your own.
I have used these questions as lesson starters or as a short test to consolidate a unit. This is partly inspired by the excellent work of Kate Jones and her work on "Retrieval Practice"; I'll write more about this in a future blog post, but in sum the idea is this:
In order to get students to fully understand a topic its details have to be stored in long term memory, and be connected to existing knowledge. This is achieved by "calling to mind" the information previously taught and using this information in some way; new information is thus moved from the smaller working memory and stored in the long-term memory.
Low-stakes quizzing is one way to achieve this; but it is only one way! Therefore, a bank of quiz questions which could be re-used as revision seemed like a good idea. Even if the student gets an incorrect answer this can be a useful learning point as you'd spend a little time to go through the answers and get students to self-correct.
I also produced these so I had a bank of questions to hand rather than trying to make some at the last minute (or as one of my colleagues sometimes does - make them up on the spot).
Feel free to download this and to adapt for yourself. The link is here.
Each topic has at least 4 sets of 9 questions. Pages are in pairs with a page of questions and a duplicated page with answers. There is a section of mixed questions too.
I also produced these so I had a bank of questions to hand rather than trying to make some at the last minute (or as one of my colleagues sometimes does - make them up on the spot).
Feel free to download this and to adapt for yourself. The link is here.
Each topic has at least 4 sets of 9 questions. Pages are in pairs with a page of questions and a duplicated page with answers. There is a section of mixed questions too.
Superb resource, Ben. Many thanks for sharing.
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