Activity
Hot Seat
Hot Seat
Activity Overview
A student assumes the role of a character, historical figure, or expert and answers questions from classmates in character.
Grade Levels
Subject Areas
Activity Types
Detailed Example
Historical Figures of the Civil Rights Movement (History - 5th Grade)
Materials Needed
- Special chair designated as the 'Hot Seat'
- Role cards with biographical information
- Simple costume elements or name tags
- Question prompt cards for audience members
- Research materials on civil rights figures
- Preparation worksheet for Hot Seat students
- Feedback forms for audience
Preparation
Select 4-6 important civil rights figures (e.g., Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr., Ruby Bridges). Create role cards with key biographical information. Prepare question prompt cards for audience members. Designate a special area with a chair as the 'Hot Seat' space.
Step-by-Step Instructions
Introduce the concept of Hot Seat as a way to deeply understand historical figures through role-play.
Assign historical figures to student volunteers or small groups (1-3 days in advance).
Preparation phase (homework or previous class period):
Students research their assigned figure using provided materials and additional sources
Complete preparation worksheet with key biographical details, accomplishments, challenges, beliefs, and quotes
Practice speaking in first person as their character
Prepare 2-3 opening statements to introduce themselves
For audience members, review respectful questioning techniques and provide question stems:
'What did you think about...'
'How did you feel when...'
'Why did you decide to...'
'What was most challenging about...'
Hot Seat implementation (8-10 minutes per historical figure):
Student enters as historical figure and sits in the Hot Seat
Gives brief introduction in character
Classmates ask questions, which the student answers in character
Teacher facilitates, ensuring respectful discourse and historical accuracy
Brief debrief after each Hot Seat:
What new insights did we gain about this person?
What surprised us about their perspective?
How did their actions impact the Civil Rights Movement?
Final reflection: Students write a paragraph comparing two of the civil rights figures, highlighting their different approaches and contributions.
Differentiation Strategies
For students uncomfortable with solo performance, allow partner Hot Seats where students can support each other. For struggling students, provide more detailed preparation sheets with possible Q&A. For advanced students, introduce more complex historical figures or challenging ethical dilemmas for the character to address.
Assessment Guidelines
Evaluate Hot Seat students on historical accuracy, depth of understanding, and ability to respond in character. Assess audience members on quality and insight of questions. Review final reflection paragraphs for comparative analysis skills.