A) Cold call five students
B) Quick-Write (60–90s) then pair share
C) Open discussion
D) Homework prompt
Correct: B
Explanation: Quick-Write forces simultaneous cognitive commitment: all learners retrieve, frame thinking in their own words, and
reveal partial understandings you can act on immediately. Pair share gives rehearsal time so more students are ready to speak
publicly. Cold calling samples too little and invites passivity from the rest. Open discussions tilt toward dominant voices and drift.
Homework delays formative data until the next day when misconceptions are harder to address.
2) You need an instant read on which claim students believe is strongest right now.
A) Gallery walk
B) Hold-Ups/response cards on “3”
C) Volunteers explain
D) Silent reading
Correct: B
Explanation: Hold-Ups produce a same-time reveal, letting you see distribution across choices in seconds and target follow-ups
strategically. Because responses are simultaneous, social influence is reduced and quieter students are equally represented. Gallery
walks and volunteer shares are serial and slow, obscuring whole-class patterns. Silent reading generates no visible thinking, so it
cannot guide immediate adjustments to instruction or yield equitable participation.
3) Groups each wrote one sentence supporting a theme; you want patterns without 10 serial share-outs.
A) Round-robin shares
B) Chalkboard/Whiteboard Splash + silent scan
C) Random name selector
D) Exit ticket
Correct: B
Explanation: A Splash aggregates contributions in a public space, enabling students to scan, annotate, and cluster ideas quickly. The
silent sweep surfaces trends and outliers far faster than sequential presentations. Random selection hides most work and rewards
, performance rather than synthesis. Exit tickets push analysis to after class, forfeiting the live opportunity to connect ideas and refine
criteria while energy and context are still fresh.
4) You want students to evaluate which two pieces of evidence best support a claim.
A) Think-Pair-Share
B) Ranking/Ordering with justification for #1 and last
C) Quick-Write only
D) Pop quiz
Correct: B
Explanation: Ranking compels comparison, prioritization, and defense—students must articulate criteria and negotiate trade-offs.
Requiring justification for the strongest and weakest evidence deepens precision. Think-Pair-Share is useful but often stops at
explanation without prioritization. A solitary Quick-Write lacks the productive conflict of ranking. A pop quiz measures individuals
but doesn’t structure the dialogue that exposes reasoning and builds shared evaluative norms.
5) You need group accountability where any student may present for the team.
A) Numbered Heads Together
B) Jigsaw
C) Volunteers
D) Four Corners
Correct: A
Explanation: Numbered Heads builds ubiquitous responsibility: everyone prepares because any number can be called. It couples
collaboration with randomized accountability, lifting participation beyond “one strong student per group.” Jigsaw is powerful for
distributing subtopics but doesn’t guarantee shared ownership of a single product. Volunteer systems skew participation to confident
students. Four Corners is a stance routine, not a mechanism for intra-team accountability on problem solving.
6) Students should publicly commit to a position, then refine it with evidence from texts.
A) Whole-class debate only
B) Four Corners + evidence share + revision
C) Exit ticket
D) Chalkboard Splash