Carousel Brainstorming

Carousel Brainstorming

Activity Overview

Student groups rotate through chart paper stations, adding ideas to different prompts and building on previous groups' contributions.

Grade Levels

3rd Grade4th Grade5th Grade6th Grade7th Grade8th Grade9th Grade10th Grade11th Grade12th Grade

Subject Areas

ScienceMathematicsEnglishHistoryForeign Language

Activity Types

CollaborativeActiveCreative

Detailed Example

Environmental Conservation Solutions (Science - 5th Grade)

Materials Needed

  • 5-6 pieces of chart paper posted around the room
  • Different colored markers for each group
  • Environmental problem prompt cards
  • Timer or bell for rotations
  • Stickers for prioritizing ideas
  • Environmental fact sheets for reference
  • Summary recording sheet

Preparation

Create chart paper stations around the room, each with a different environmental problem prompt at the top (e.g., 'Solutions for reducing plastic pollution,' 'Ways to conserve water at school,' 'How to protect endangered species'). Assign each student group a different color marker to track contributions. Prepare brief fact sheets about each environmental issue.

Step-by-Step Instructions

1.

Introduction to carousel brainstorming (5 minutes):

Explain the rotation process and purpose of building on others' ideas

Establish norms: add new ideas, build on existing ones, no criticism during brainstorming

Demonstrate how to review, then add to previous contributions

2.

Environmental issues background (8-10 minutes):

Briefly review the environmental problems featured at each station

Share key facts about each issue to inform brainstorming

Clarify that solutions can be individual, community, or global actions

3.

First station rotation (5 minutes):

Assign each group to a starting station

Groups read the environmental problem prompt

Brainstorm and record as many solutions as possible using their assigned color marker

Aim for at least 5-7 ideas per station

4.

Subsequent rotations (4 minutes each):

Groups rotate clockwise to the next station

Read all previous contributions

Add new ideas and build upon existing ones

Place a star next to ideas they think are especially effective

Continue until all groups have visited each station

5.

Return to original station (5 minutes):

Groups return to their starting station

Review all contributions added during rotations

Organize the ideas into categories (e.g., low-cost, high-impact, school-based, home-based)

6.

Gallery walk and prioritization (8 minutes):

Students tour all stations with dot stickers

Place stickers on the ideas they believe would be most effective and feasible

Note the top 3 ideas for each environmental problem

7.

Solution action planning (10 minutes):

Groups select one top-rated solution from their original station

Develop a brief action plan: steps, resources needed, and potential obstacles

8.

Sharing and reflection: Each group presents their environmental problem and top solution with action steps.

Differentiation Strategies

For younger students, use images alongside text prompts and simplify problems. For groups needing support, provide solution starter examples at each station. For advanced groups, add complexity with economic or political considerations for each solution.

Assessment Guidelines

Evaluate quantity and quality of contributions from each group. Note which students can effectively build on others' ideas versus simply adding unrelated suggestions. Review action plans for practicality and understanding of environmental issues.

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