28 Great Wrap
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28 Great Wrap

Sep 22, 2023

February 28, 2023 // by Kimberly Lange

You’ve planned your lesson, chosen an introductory and follow-up activity, and gathered all your resources. Now what? Wrapping up a lesson is as important as the lesson itself. Your lesson wrap-up can help you evaluate whether your teaching method was effective and whether students understand the concepts. It can also help solidify their comprehension in a fun way. This list has 28 fabulous wrap-up activities that you can use in your classroom.

Jenga is a fun game where you build a tower using small pieces of wood. You then have to try and take out a block without breaking the tower. This game can be turned into a fun wrap-up activity by writing questions or facts on each block to have your students review the content they’ve just covered in the lesson.

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For this activity, you will need big, white pieces of paper. Divide the class into four groups and tell each group to go to a corner in the classroom. Give each group a topic or heading to summarize. They will then put the papers up on the classroom walls and move around to read what other groups have written.

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Kahoot is a fun and engaging quiz game where the teacher can create quizzes, and the students can all respond on their own devices. It's a great way to keep students engaged and recap the lesson or chapter. You will need a computer and cell phones, and you can even divide students into groups and have them compete.

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Role play is always a fun activity to wrap a lesson up, especially if it's about literature or historical events. The students can dress up according to the time period and setting. They can then write their own scripts and even design the sets.

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Everyone loves a good scavenger hunt, and it's also a great way to wrap up a lesson. You can create riddles and clues based on keywords from your main lesson. Students will then need to guess the right description based on what they just learned. Write questions and clues and place them around the classroom. Only if the students answer correctly can they get a new clue.

Learn More: It's Lit Teaching

Use this game platform to create your own Jeopardy-style game. Jeopardy is a fun game that will test your students’ knowledge and encourage them to pay attention during the lesson. Students also get the chance to review the content by listening to the correct responses of other students.

Learn More: Play Factile

This fun wrap-up activity is perfect for lesson closures and will create a culture of learning. Divide students into pairs and have each pair summarize an idea or subject in the form of a news broadcast. You can make it fun with props, a camera crew, and even a teleprompter.

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This is a fun, quick activity to help students recall what they learned. It's so simple that it can be done after every section or chapter. Students write the main idea or a summary of the content down on a piece of white paper and then crumble it up and throw it in the air. Each student then picks up someone else's snowball and reads it aloud.

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Put the students in groups and tell them to write a song or rap about what they have learned about a certain topic. This is a great way for students to learn how to summarize and present important information.

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Write numbers on it and learners can answer the question that correlates with a number. Whoever catches the ball has to answer the question of the number on top of the ball. There are many different variations to this game.

Learn More: Teaching With Jennifer Findley

This quick and effective closure technique only takes a minute of the lesson and is helpful to both the students and the teacher. At the end of the lesson, the students have one minute to write down what they have learned and what they still want to know.

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Exit tickets are a good way for teachers to track their students’ understanding and determine whether their own teaching style is working for the students. They can ascertain whether or not they need to reteach certain concepts. If just one or two students are having a hard time grasping a concept, the teacher can easily just recap with them.

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Clear or cloudy is another quick and fun way to determine if students need help understanding certain concepts. They write down the points that they understand and write down the questions that they have about things that are still ‘cloudy’.

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Thinking maps are a great way to allow students to use their thinking skills to evaluate what they’ve learned and logically sort it into one of these thinking maps.

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This fun app is a quick and easy way to recap a lesson and incorporate technology. The platform is user-friendly and customizable; making recapping a delight!

Learn More: The Techie Teacher

Google Classroom and Google slides are not only good to use for wrap-up activities, but are great to use for the entire lesson. The possibilities are endless!

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3-2-1 is a simple way to get students to think about what they’ve learned, track their understanding, make critical decisions, and create their own opinions.

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Ask your students to write tone piece of information that stuck with them from the lesson on a sticky note. This can help teachers determine what they learned and may also help if there are misconceptions or confusion about the lesson.

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Bingo is always a fun way to close a lesson. Write lesson-related keywords and concepts on Bingo cards and have your students match them to a definition.

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This simple activity is a great way to recall the main idea of a story or concept. Each student can have a die and share their answer with a partner.

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It's important for students to learn how to self-reflect and assess their learning. This self-assessment wrap-up activity will get your students to think critically about their own mathematical learning.

Learn More: The Owl Teacher

You can get these fun buzzers and have a quick quiz at the end of each lesson to establish if your students are ready to move on to the next topic.

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This quick activity allows students to verbally share their thoughts and summaries of the lesson with their peers by passing a ball around. Whoever catches the ball must share one thought.

Learn More: Mountain View School District

Allow each student to write a question they have about the lesson. Let the students form two circles, one inner and one outer circle. The student in the outer circle can ask the person in front of them in the inner circle a question, then switch.

Learn More: Mountain View School District

Ask the students questions related to what, who, where, when, and why. This is a fast way to summarize the content of a lesson- especially a history or literature lesson. You can change the questions to only use the ones applicable to the lesson.

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Thumbs up is a super easy way to check for understanding. Simply ask your students to answer questions with a thumbs up if they understand a concept or a thumbs down if they don't understand.

Learn More: Mountain View School District

Create a fun riddle about certain concepts or main ideas that were taught during the lesson. Write the riddle down on the board or simply say it aloud and let the students try to solve it before leaving.

Learn More: Mountain View School District

This fun activity can be used for most language and social studies lessons. Give each student a blank piece of paper and let them draw a quick doodle about the lesson. It can be about a character, physical thing, concept, or representation of abstract thoughts. This will allow them to think critically about what they’ve learned and also be creative.

Learn More: Mountain View School District

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Category: Classroom Ideas

1. Jenga 2. Read the Room 3. Play Kahoot 4. Role Play 5. Scavenger Hunt 6. Jeopardy-Style Game 7. News Broadcast 8. Snow Storm 9. Write a Song 10. Beach Ball Breakdown 11. Minute Paper 12. Exit Tickets 13. Clear or Cloudy 14. Thinking Maps 15. Recap App 16. Google Slides 17. 3-2-1 18. Sticky Notes 19. Bingo 20. Roll and Retell 21. Self Assessment 22. Quiz Games 23. Whip Around 24. Fishbowl 25. The 5 W's 26. Thumbs Up 27. Riddles 28. Quick Doodles