3-Stage Online Fishbowl
Home Up

3-Stage Online Fishbowl

  1. Make up 3 related questions. 
  2. Post the first open-ended question on a discussion web or chat.
  3. Form 3 groups of students, and have Group 1 discuss the question first.  Groups 2 and 3 should "lurk"--just reading responses. Set a time limit (e.g. a couple days for a discussion forum, a half-hour for a chat).
  4. Ask the observing groups to comment on the discussion held by Group 1 on the first question, perhaps evaluating the procedure, whether everyone got a fair shot at contributing to the discussion, or the length of answers.
  5. After this trailblazing on the first question, Group 2 discusses the second question for the same time period. 
  6. Ask the observing groups (1 and 3) to comment on the discussions so far.
  7. Group 3 discusses the third question with the same time limit while Groups 1 and 2 read only.
  8. Finally, the entire class offers final, wrap-up comments on the question and the discussions.

As a final step, gather evaluation data by having the class reply to an assessment question about the exercise.

Silberman offers this variation: Use one question instead of three. 

It is reasonable to expect that this exercise would, in effect, train students in your course to discuss open-ended questions. Groups 2 and 3 aren't starting from scratch; they've seen and hopefully reflected on the discussion of Group 1.  In later exercises, you might have students suggest the questions.

Copyright3.gif (24311 bytes) 1999-2011+ by the Virginia Community College System. Prepared for the VCCS by Professor Eric Hibbison, 1998-2001 MRCTE Chair and Chief Chair of RCTE from  2000-2005. Permission is granted to use this content for professional development or other educational, nonprofit purposes.  Animations used on this site are either part of the Front Page theme or from a royalty free collection called "Web Clip Empire 250,000" ©1997, 1998 by Xoom, Inc., and its Licensors.  

Reminder for folks new to the Web: UNDERLINED WORDS (and some graphics images) ARE HOT LINKS. To preview them, hold your mouse on the hotlink (the arrow becomes a hand as you "mouseover" a link) and read the "URL" (Web address) in the "status line" (bottom) of your maximized Web browser. To visit, just click.