These quick tips from the Faculty Teaching Institute can be used with think-pair-share (TPS), where students think on their own, pair to talk to a neighbor, and share with the whole class, with or without polling.
Explain to students why you are using think-pair-share. Explain that the point is to help them learn by reasoning and discussion. Otherwise, they may assume that the goal is to test or track them.
Offer credit for participation. This may be based on observations of student behavior, and/or points through electronic clickers (e.g., 1 point for answering, extra credit for the correct answer).
Use a variety of questions, including conceptual questions. Many existing TPS questions focus on conceptual understanding, which is useful for student learning. You can also use TPS questions for surveys, interpreting graphs, learning reflections, predicting outcomes of demonstrations, or breaking down a problem into parts.
Use a mix of simple and complex questions. Use a range of simple and complex questions to help students build confidence, and also engage with difficult ideas. Many people use questions that are too simple. If a student can answer the question on their own, then it’s not a TPS question.
Give students time to think about their answers on their own. Let students read through the question and reason about it to arrive at their own answer; this avoids privileging students who are faster readers or thinkers. Ensure you give them enough time to do this by reading the question and answering it on your own. Then ask, “Does anyone need more time?” (not “Is everybody ready?”).
Have students vote anonymously (for TPS with polling). If you are using ABCD voting cards, have students vote on the count of 3, and hold cards against their chest so other students can’t see their votes. They can use the back side of the sheet for “none of the above” and all four colored squares for “I don’t know.” With electronic polling, do not show students the results of this initial vote.
Decide whether to have students turn to their neighbors (for TPS with polling). A common rule of thumb is that students may not need to discuss their answers if 80% or more vote correctly.
Circulate and listen in while students discuss. This is very valuable and lets you listen to their reasoning, and identify some ideas that can be brought out in the large group discussion.
Have a signal for ending small group discussion E.g., a bell, raising your hand, or telling “time!”. Give them a 10-second warning. Then (for TPS with polling), have them re-vote.
Wait to reveal the answer. If you reveal the correct answer as soon as students are done voting, it can short-circuit students' engagement and thinking and convey that the right answer is the only thing that matters. Hear reasons for all answer choices before confirming the correct answer.
Hold an interactive debrief, discussing the reasoning behind right and wrong answers. Whether you have students discuss with one another or not, the debrief should always include a discussion of what the correct answer is, and why the incorrect answers are not correct. If no students volunteer to explain a particular answer, you might suggest some reasons. Note: If students have not yet converged on the correct answer, there may be something confusing about the question.
Tips for writing TPS polling questions:
Additional practices:
This Expert Recommendation is based in part on G. Brissenden & E. Prather, Think-Pair-Share: A revised “How to” guide (2015), D. Duncan, Tips for successful ‘clicker’ use (2008), and D. Bruff, Teaching with classroom response systems (Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, 2009).
This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grants DUE-2141678, 2141745, 2141769, 2141795, and 2142045. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.