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  1. What Is Wait Time? Wait time refers to two specific practices where instructors deliberately pause. First, wait time 1 constitutes a 3-5 second pause between asking a question and soliciting an answer. Second, wait time 2 is a 3-5 second pause after a student response.

  2. Wait-time describes either the amount of time a teacher pauses between asking a question and the beginning of a student’s response or the amount of time between a student’s response and the teacher’s reacting or asking another question.

  3. 10 mar 2015 · Extended wait time is built in to classroom interactions because of the IRF (Initiation–Response–Feedback/Follow-up) framework that dominates these interactions. Extending wait time can lead to a variety of changes in the norms of classroom interaction.

  4. Waiting for several seconds after asking a question so that students, particularly introverted ones, are able to gather their thoughts before responding is proven to expand participation and improve the quality of student responses.

  5. Wait for a student response (Wait Time 1). Wait at least 3 – 5 seconds to demonstrate that the question is not rhetorical. 4. Wait after the student response. (Wait Time 2). Wait at least 3 – 5 seconds for another student to respond to the initial student response to emphasize that students are being asked to engage

  6. 22 sie 2018 · Wait time, as Kegan calls it, also makes it less stressful for quieter students. “Waiting a few more seconds actually can be quite productive,” Kegan says in a video about wait time on the website for Instructional Moves, an Ed School project designed to give useful teaching tools to educators.

  7. 1 cze 2018 · Here are some quick tips for employing some wait time that can pay off big in the student learning experience: When you pose a question, give all students an opportunity to write an answer...

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