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Discovering your classmates
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This is an ice breaker activity that helps students feel that they belong in the group. The purpose of the activity is to help students get to know one another by identifying shared characteristics. It can help build groups prior to groupwork as well as stimulating conversation between students. I always use it with new groups at the start of term but it can be used (or variations of it) when you put students into groups. It can also be used as a tool to introduce undergraduates to class ethos/norms (being respectful of differences, learning each other’s names) and to…
Description
Tried and tested (used and developed over three academic years or more)
Key words: belonging, group work, ice breaker
Further reading:
- Turkle, S. (2016). Reclaiming Conversation. The Power of Talk in a Digital Age. New York: Penguin Books.
Please complete the following key features in relation to your activity:
Time duration: 10-15 minutes
Student level: Any
Preparation time before class: 5 minutes
Additional materials or equipment needed: None
Other general tips/advice:
- It works well in pairs but if you have an odd number of students, it can work in threes.
- It is essential for students to take a note otherwise they may not remember each other’s names to use in groupwork afterward.
- It tends to work well at the start of term, with students at the start of a course, with mixed groups containing many backgrounds.
- If combined with a shuffling of the class (see attached activity) it can help to break up any cliques and involve quieter or socially anxious students (who might come out of their shells more in a one-to-one interaction).
- Some students can finish the task quickly. Have follow up questions for them.
- If you can, allow the students time to go off topic to get to know one another. In a post-Covid time of less eye-to-eye interaction, there can be benefits of them starting to form friendships.
Additional information
| Contributor | Piers von Berg Piers teaches Law at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. He teaches critical thinking, human rights, criminal justice and children’s rights. He is interested in and researches human rights and citizenship education. |
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| Keywords | belonging, group work, ice breaker |
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