Balloon Bop
Purpose
Students analyze an assessment question and correct learning mistakes by participating in a collaborative balloon activity.
Materials
Instructions
- Organize students into groups of 5-6.
- Provide each group with 1 blue balloon and 1 green balloon, and tell them to blow up the balloons.
- Project a complex assessment question (template provided).
Round 1
- Start the music.
- Students pass the blue balloon around the circle like a “hot potato.”
- Stop the music.
- Student holding the blue balloon shares what the question is about and one way to start; the group shares another.
Round 2
- Start the music.
- Students bop the green balloon around the circle, not letting it hit the ground.
- Stop the music.
- Student closest to or holding the green balloon eliminates 1 answer choice; the group eliminates another.
Round 3
- Start the music.
- Students pass the blue balloon and bop the green balloon at the same time.
- Stop the music.
- Students holding the blue and green balloons debate the final 2 answer choices.
- The group decides which answer is correct.
Classroom Management
- Model how to pass the blue balloon and bop the green balloon.
- Role-play or rehearse how students must stop playing with the balloons when the music stops and how the person nearest the balloon is the one who grabs it without argument.
- Remind students there will be no harm or humiliation for incorrect answers because correcting mistakes is a sign of intelligence!
Differentiation
- Promote access by allowing questions to be previewed or allowing the use of notes/journals.
- Promote access by providing the correct answer for students to justify.
- Provide response support by allowing the balloon holder to “phone a friend” to collaborate on a response.
Think It Up!
- Have students think more deeply about the concept by responding to a Think It Up prompt as an exit ticket or journal entry:
- What connection did you make to a mistake? Explain how to avoid the mistake in the future.
- Encourage students to use lead4ward’s Thinking Stems (English/Spanish) to frame their responses, if needed.
Take me back to the instructional strategies home page