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Thinking Routines
Routines exist in all classrooms; they are the patterns
by which we operate and go about the job of learning and working together
in a classroom environment. A routine can be thought of as any procedure,
process, or pattern of action that is used repeatedly to manage and facilitate
the accomplishment of specific goals or tasks. Classrooms have routines
that serve to manage student behavior and interactions, to organizing
the work of learning, and to establish rules for communication and discourse.
Classrooms also have routines that structure the way students go about
the process of learning. These learning routines can be simple structures,
such as reading from a text and answering the questions at the end of
the chapter, or they may be designed to promote students' thinking,
such as asking students what they know, what they want to know, and what
they have learned as part of a unit of study.
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