KWL Chart and Y Chart; Excellent Thinking Tools and Resources
· A KWL table, often known as a KWL chart, is a visual organiser created to support learning.
·
The
term KWL stands for what pupils already know, wish to know, and ultimately learn
throughout a session.
KWL chart: Benefits
·
Students
can plan their study using a K-W-L chart, and they can use it to keep track of
the data they obtain.
·
Students
can use this tool to confirm their knowledge of a subject and to consider how
they wish to focus their studies.
·
For
each column of the chart, pose leading questions to the students, such as
"What do you already 'know' about this topic?"
·
What
details about the subject do you "want" to discover
·
And
"What have you 'learned' as a result of your observation?"
Y Chart: What is it?
·
The
brainstorming of a topic is organised around three dimensions using the Y
Chart, a three-part graphic organiser:
1.
How
does it appear?
2.
What
sensation do you have?
3.
What
sounds like it?
·
For
many years, instructors have relied on the Y Chart as a useful tool in the
classroom.
·
As
both students and teachers work to learn more and more about a subject
utilising the sensory method of what does this subject Look, Sound, and Feel
like, it functions as an analytical tool.
Y Chart: Benefits
·
A
Y chart is
a great tool for getting students to think deeply about any topic.
·
It
enables learners to transition from tangible to abstract descriptors.
·
It
encourages a student to be more active in learning environment.
·
A
shared learning experience may be created by teachers acting as learning
facilitators
·
It
helps teachers create learner-centred classrooms.
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