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Peer Review Revision

English • 30 • 26 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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English
30
26 students
25 April 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 5 of 5 in the unit "Explaining the World". Lesson Title: Peer Review and Revision of Explanations Lesson Description: Students will participate in a peer review process where they will share their drafts with classmates. They will provide constructive feedback and learn how to revise their work based on peer suggestions, enhancing their final explanations.

Peer Review Revision

Overview

  • Duration: 30 minutes
  • Class size: 26 students
  • Unit: Explaining the World (Lesson 5 of 5)
  • Subject: English
  • Age: Third Class (approx. 8-9 years)
  • Irish Education Context:
    This lesson aligns with the Primary Language Curriculum (PLC) and the English Language Specification under the Irish Primary Curriculum Framework. It emphasises communicative competencies, constructive peer interaction, and formative assessment as outlined for Literacy in third class.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:

  • Share their draft explanations verbally and in writing with classmates.
  • Give and receive constructive, specific, and kind feedback based on clear criteria.
  • Use peer feedback to revise and improve their written explanations.
  • Understand the purpose of revision and peer collaboration in the writing process.

Links to Curriculum Standards

  • Primary Language Curriculum 2015 (English, strand Unit 4: Writing):
    • Develop writing for different purposes and in different contexts.
    • Reflect on and revise own writing using set criteria.
    • Engage respectfully with others' ideas and suggestions.
  • Framework for Junior Cycle (continuum):
    • Foster reflective, collaborative learning.
    • Use peer feedback to develop personal literacy.

Materials Needed

  • Students’ draft explanations (from previous lessons in the unit).
  • Peer Review Checklist (printed for each student, simple and visual).
  • Two coloured pens per student (e.g., blue for compliments, red for suggestions).
  • Large A3 chart paper or whiteboard for co-creating success criteria.
  • ‘Kind Feedback’ sentence starters poster/handout (e.g., “I like how you...”, “I wonder if you could...”).
  • Timer or stopwatch.

Lesson Procedure

1. Starter Activity – What is Peer Review? (5 minutes)

  • Teacher introduces and discusses with the class:
    “Why is it useful to ask friends for feedback when we write?”
  • Brief class talk using examples: E.g., “If you’re building a model, do you check it yourself or ask your friend to look?”
  • Share the lesson’s aim: to help each other to make our explanation writing even better!
  • Generate or recall a simple list of peer review “rules”: kindness, being specific, listening carefully. Display these on board/chart.

2. Set Clear Success Criteria for Feedback (5 minutes)

  • Use prior lessons on explanation writing to remind students what a good explanation looks like.
  • Together, create a shortlist on the whiteboard or chart of ‘What makes a good explanation?’ including:
    • Clear topic sentence.
    • Interesting details.
    • Logical order.
    • Vocabulary that helps the reader understand.
  • Introduce the Peer Review Checklist with simple criteria based on these points: “I can find…”
  • Model how to use the checklist with an anonymous example draft.

3. Peer Review Activity (10 minutes)

  • Pair up students (or groups of three if numbers require) ensuring friendly but varied partners.
  • Each student quietly reads their classmate’s draft explanation.
  • Using their pens and checklist, students highlight:
    • Blue pen: What they liked or was clear.
    • Red pen: One or two suggestions for improvement.
  • Encourage use of Kind Feedback starters to guide verbal feedback within pairs.
  • Teacher circulates, prompting thoughtful comments (“Can you give a specific reason why you liked that sentence?” “What part could be clearer?”).

4. Revision Time (7-8 minutes)

  • Students take peers’ feedback and consider how to improve their draft.
  • Teacher encourages students to prioritise 1-2 key improvements rather than “fix everything.”
  • Students quietly revise their explanations individually in their copybooks or on worksheets.
  • Teacher offers support for grammar, ordering, and vocabulary as necessary.

5. Plenary – Reflecting on the Learning (3-4 minutes)

  • Whole class discussion guided by teacher questions:
    • “What did you find helpful about hearing your friend’s thoughts?”
    • “Was there a suggestion that made your explanation better?”
    • “How did it feel to give feedback?”
  • Capture some responses on the whiteboard.
  • Reaffirm how writing is a process and that everyone can improve their work.
  • Highlight that peer review will be a useful skill in many subjects and future work.

Differentiation and Inclusion

  • Support Needs:
    • Provide sentence starters and a simplified checklist for students who need language support.
    • Allow oral peer feedback instead of written if needed.
    • Teacher or SNA support for organising peer pairs for maximum comfort.
  • Enhancement:
    • More proficient writers can focus on higher-order feedback (organisation, vocabulary choices).
    • Offer challenge to reword or add helpful detail based on peer suggestions.

Assessment

  • Ongoing formative assessment through observation of peer interaction and revision choices.
  • Use teacher notes to inform individual next steps in writing progression.
  • Collect revised drafts (optional) for review at unit end.

Extension Idea (if time allows or for homework)

  • Students can write a short reflection on how peer feedback helped them.
  • Create a ‘Peer Review Wall’ where students post one compliment and one suggestion for ongoing community learning.

By engaging students in respectful and purposeful peer review, this lesson meets the Irish curriculum goals of fostering literacy skills, collaborative learning, and self-reflection essential for young writers explaining the world around them.

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