Introduction, warm-up and ice-breaker activities for BSL sessions

Introduction, warm-up and ice-breaker activities are individual, pair or group activities that perform a number of diverse functions, typically at the beginning of a lesson. These functions include developing or sustaining a cohort experience for students, promoting a collective, constructivist and collaborative learning environment or priming/provoking students when a new topic is being introduced (such as personal experience, prior knowledge).

Activities may include introductions, role-play, peer-to-peer interviews, quick presentations of an image or object. These activities are well-suited to a teaching space designed around ‘pods’ or small tables for on-campus students (aka ‘roomies’) and breakout rooms in Zoom for remote students (aka ‘zoomies’).

How to implement this in your BSL session

Step 1: Determine the timing of the activity

Your activity may require some preparation prior to the class time. This may include providing the brief or spark for the activity beforehand via the LMS and allowing students to prepare. However, if spontaneity and surprise are integral to a warm-up activity, then encourage students to arrive at class on time.

Although these activity types would typically take place at the start of a lesson to prime, provoke and personalise, a warm-up activity might effectively break-up a lengthy class with some physical movement and imaginative play.

Be prepared to tightly regulate the timing, or alternatively be ready to adapt the session if there is a benefit in letting the activity run over time.

Step 2: Prepare and introduce the activity prior to the BSL session

In order to prepare students to engage in the activity, provide a brief for the activity in the LMS so that students are aware of what is required before the session. This is particularly important if the activity is in Week 1.

This brief can contain clear instructions on what is expected, the steps needed to complete the activity, and a statement explaining the learning purpose (such as aligned to outcomes or authentic and inspiring  ). For BSL sessions, it is recommended that you provide instructions for both campus and remote students which may include any online tools to be used.

Consider introducing the activity by modelling it yourself. This allows to demonstrate the format or standards you expect students to aspire to. However, it is worth being conscious of not intimidating the students by being ‘a hard act to follow’. Self-deprecating humour can be a terrific ice-breaker and help establish the tone and mood for your classes.

Step 3: Manage time during the session

Regulate the time so that all students have the opportunity to participate, and to fit in with the rest of your planned teaching and learning activities.

Check in with pairs and groups as they engage in the activity, if appropriate, and be available for questions.

Step 4: Facilitate feedback

Icebreaker activities provide a great opportunity for self-feedback and reflection.

Feedback rewards students for participating and encourages them to think further on a topic or problem. It may also prompt reflection at the end of the class or the following week. This could be facilitated by asking students how their position on a topic or their proposed solution to a problem has changed (or strengthened) at the end of a class.

Suggested introduction, warm-up and icebreaker activities

Two truths and one lie

Students present three facts about themselves (two are true and one is not) and their peer (in small groups) try to identify the true from untrue statements.

Stimulus material

Present students with some stimulus material which will cause them to talk and discuss. Examples include: video, object(s), article, point(s) of view, music, image(s), infographic, statistics, items they need to identify errors in, etc.

You can present the item to the whole class or divide students into groups and then give each group a piece of stimulus material. Scaffold the discussion by providing model questions or categories of analysis.

World map

Students place themselves on a map as an introductory icebreaker. Can be based around where students would like to go, or for diverse online subjects, as a way to demonstrate where students are studying from.

Emotional scale

Icebreaker poll that asks students to note how they're feeling today, identify their mood/feeling from set list of options or place themselves along a continuum. Good for gauging where students are at and temperature of the room.

One word/one image

Students can only use one word to describe and introduce themselves.

Alternative: Students post an image that best represents them and why.

Bingo

‘Find someone who’ bingo, in which students have a list of attributes, experiences, likes etc and must tick off classmates who fit the descriptions. Once all are ticked off, it is time to yell bingo.

How to provide feedback

Feedback may be provided at multiple stages during and after an activity. As the students prepare their response, role-play or introduction, check-in on understanding and progress. Acknowledge students’ participation once their part of the activity is completed and highlight any shared interests etc among classmates and yourself (such as likes, dislikes, points of view).

Finally, as appropriate, encourage student reflection at the end of the session, and potentially at a later stage to consider their learning progress.

Asynchronous alternatives

  • LMS Discussions
  • Padlet activities

Support and resources

Pedagogical tags

engagement collaboration cohort development problem solving roleplay reflection scenario based

This page was last updated on 04 Feb 2022.

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