TLaC Transition Guide
TLaC Transition Guide
Over the past four years, Doug Lemov has continued to learn from watching great
teachers in action—more specifically, watching teachers use and adapt the 49 techniques
from the original Teach Like a Champion. Incorporating all of these additional
observations into a book that is as much sequel as it is revision, Teach Like a Champion 2.0
features 62 techniques and 75 new video clips.
• Details about the new 2.0, content structure of 2.0, including changes from
the previous book
• A snapshot of revised, removed, and new techniques
• Descriptions of useful resources that have been added
• Information about our online resources
OVERVIEW
NEW STRUCTURE
✗ OUTTAKE TECHNIQUES
REFLECTION QUESTIONS
ADDITIONAL FEATURES
What do you do when a student gives up and simply won’t try? How do you know what
the student who hides silently in the corner is learning? How can you maximize the
amount of work students are doing? And what do you do when you ask a student to sit
down, and he smirks and tells you to sit down? As these examples suggest, the predict-
ability of endemic problems does not imply that they are simple to solve. And it shouldn’t
take a dozen years of brutal trial and error, suffering, and fatigue for a teacher to figure
these problems out. Further observation has helped Lemov to see the many endemic
problems for which teachers have derived brilliant solutions.
Incorporating all of these additional observations into a book that is as much sequel as
revision, Teach Like a Champion 2.0 features 62 techniques and 75 new video clips. This
guide outlines the new content structure of 2.0, including changes from the previous
book; a snapshot of revised, removed, and new techniques; a snapshot of new videos
included; and descriptions of useful resources that have been added to 2.0, as well as
information on our online resources.
PART 3: Ratio
The chapter “Engaging Students in Your Lessons,” is now renamed “Ratio” and divided into
three chapters that explore ways teachers can build two types of Ratio—Participation
Ratio (breadth and frequency of engagement) and Think Ration (depth of engagement)
Ratio. The three chapters focus, respectively, on questioning, discussion, and writing and
are preceded by an important “Content Prerequisite” in Chapter Seven. It argues that
rigorous thinking requires a commitment to content knowledge.
CHAPTER 7 - Building Ratio Through Questioning
• Lemov emphasizes the importance of reading “The Content Prerequisite”
in Chapter 7 before reading the three chapters on ratio.
• Vegas was removed in 2.0.
2. How might you Standardize the Format in your classroom in terms of handouts and
homework material? In terms of the visual field? What other ways might you
standardize your classroom, and in what ways might they improve the overall efficiency
of your lessons and your ability to assess student mastery?
3. Select one question from an upcoming lesson. Working with that question,
a. Script a follow-up question for a correct response
b. Plan one anticipated wrong answer
c. Script the first question you’d ask to follow an incorrect response
d. Plan your cue and student hand signals
Chapter 2 – Acting on the Data and the Culture of Error All New!
1. We all have indicators that tell students when an answer is right or wrong.
Brainstorm all of the tells that teachers have, including your own (for example,
nodding, smiling).
2. Brainstorm a list of responses you could give to a wrong answer that could help build a
Culture of Error in your classroom. (Examples: “I expect there are a lot of different
answers here.” “That answer is going to be really helpful to us.” “You did a lot of smart
things to get that answer. Now there’s one thing we need to change.”)
3. If students are asked to round 246.74 to the nearest hundreds place, what errors are
students apt to make? List as many possible student misunderstandings as you can.
Plan for how you’d address those misunderstandings.
4. Pick one question in your lesson outline for which you anticipate the need for deep
excavation.
a. List the potential wrong answers that students might have.
b. Discuss why students might give these answers and what correct thinking might lead
to an incorrect answer.
3. Here’s a list of questions you might hear asked in a classroom and the objective for the
lesson in which they were asked:
• 6 + 5 = ? Objective: Students will be able to master simple computations:
addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.
• Who can use the word achieve in a sentence? Objective: Students will be able to
increase their vocabulary through drills that explore the use of synonyms, antonyms,
and different parts of speech.
• What is one branch of the US government? Objective: Students will be able to
understand the three branches of the US government and how they relate to each
other and current events.
Try to think of ten Stretch It questions you might ask for the one that’s closest
to what you teach. (This is a great activity to do with other teachers.)
4. Try to imagine the most “boring” content (to you) that you could teach. Now script the
first five minutes of your class in which you find a way to make it exciting and engaging
to students.
2. Make a building tour of your school, visiting classrooms and writing down the
objectives. Score them as to whether they meet 4Ms criteria. Fix the ones you can and
then ask yourself where as a school you need to improve objective writing.
3. Think of a recent lesson you taught, and write out all of the actions from a student’s
perspective, starting in each case with an action verb— “Listened to” and “Wrote,” for
example. If you feel daring, ask your students whether they think your agenda is
accurate. Even more daring is to ask your students to make a list of what they were
doing during your class.
2. Now take your lesson and design a three- to five-minute hook that engages students
and sets up the lesson.
3. Be sure to name the steps in the “I” portion of your lesson. Review them and find four or
five ways to make them stickier.
4. Design an Exit Ticket that will allow you to accurately assess student knowledge at the
end of the lesson.
Chapter 6 – Pacing
These questions were previously found in Chapter 8
1. Go through a lesson plan you’re likely to use in the next week, and if you don’t do this
already, assign the amount of time you think each activity is likely to take. Now that you
have general parameters, go through and find every direction you’ll give to your
students during the lesson, and designate an amount of time you will allot to each
activity. Write a short script for each that makes the amount of time available clear and
gives a beginning and end prompt to Brighten Lines.
2. Take the biggest single block of activity in your lesson (as measured in minutes) and try
to break it into two or three activities with the same objective but with slightly different
presentations. For example, if you had a section of problems for a math lesson on
rounding, you might divide it in half, with a clear line between numerical and word
problems. Then, between the two sections to make them seem like three, you might
insert a brief reflection on what rounding is and why we do it.
3. Take that same lesson plan and mark it up to add two short sessions of Call and
Response. Again, script your questions. Try to ask questions at all five levels, and note
the in-cue you’ll use.
4. Make a short list of what you want your students to do or think about when\ you use
Wait Time. Write yourself two or three five-second scripts that you can practice and use
while teaching to reinforce effective academic behaviors and discipline yourself to wait.
2. Pick a portion of your lesson plan to insert an Art of the Sentence moment. Consider
a. Your lesson objective and question
b. The level of scaffolding you will provide for students
c. Whether you will focus more on participation ratio or think ratio
d. What an exemplar Art of the Sentence response would look like and how you would
support revision
3. Now plan a Show Call to review and revise your students’ Art of the Sentence writing.
a. What type of work will you Show Call: an exemplar? an example of a common error? a
“good to great” case study?
b. How will you narrate the take and the reveal?
c. What will students look for in the Show Call analysis, and how will students revise their
own work afterwards?
2. Identify two behaviors you want students to do while in the Turn and Talk. Draft what
you will say when you model and describe the behaviors. Script your in-cue and
out-cue language and signals, and select a tool to help students generate ideas before
talking.
2. Make a poster outlining everything your students need to have to be prepared at the
beginning of class. Post it on your wall. Practice referring students to it (nonverbally
perhaps) before class begins.
3. Make a list of some of the most common requests students make while you are
teaching. Determine an appropriate nonverbal signal they can give you to make each
request and return to STAR/SLANT. Make a poster with the acronym you use spelled
out. Practice pointing at the poster and asking students to return to their seat if they
do not ask for and receive your nonverbal approval. (You’ll want them to practice
recognizing a nonverbal indicating that they should wait, which you should sometimes
use if the request comes during key instructional time.)
2. For each of the off-task behaviors in question 1, script a positive group correction and
an anonymous individual correction to address them.
3. Make a list of at least five positive student behaviors you could reinforce with nonverbal
interventions. Plan a signal for each.
4. Revise the following statements using What to Do to make them specific, concrete,
observable, and sequential:
• “Class, you should be writing this down!”
• “Tyson, stop fooling around.”
• “Don’t get distracted, Avery.”
• “Are you paying attention, Dontae?”
• “I’d like to get started, please, class.”
2. Consider what specific behavioral traits (hard work, listening to peers, checking or
rereading their work, or reading carefully, for example) you most want students to
demonstrate in your classroom. For each, write three or four scripts you might use to
reinforce them using Precise Praise.
3. Make a list of the situations in which you are most vulnerable to losing your Emotional
Constancy. Script a calm and poised comment you might make to the other people
involved that also reminds you to remain constant.
4. Brainstorm ten ways you could bring more Joy Factor into your classroom. Use at least
four of the types of joy described in the chapter.
“See It in Action”: Sometimes it’s just better to see a teacher use a technique in a class-
room than to try to picture it. Throughout the book, “See It in Action” boxes encourage
you to learn from champion teachers during exemplary moments by coupling video with
brief analysis.
“Want More?”: Techniques, in practice, are about as varied as the teachers who use them.
“Want More?” boxes try to eliminate some of the mystery by presenting different takes on
a number of techniques.
Sidebars: Several ideas that were techniques in the first version of the book are still
included in 2.0 as a sidebar. This structure builds a more implicit hierarchy into the book.
Throughout the book, sidebars were incorporated to (1) include additional guidance on
existing techniques, (2) share brand-new ideas never discussed in version 1.0, or (3)
repackage a 1.0 technique in a more stand-alone setting.
“Reflection and Practice”: Reflection and Practice questions at the end of each chapter
provide time and space to pause and examine your own teaching, as well as how you
might effectively leverage champion techniques in your classroom.
Useful Tools: At the end of each chapter, you’ll find artifacts to support your
implementation of the techniques in your classroom and within your school. Many of the
tools are located only on the companion website, www.teachlikeachampion.com, so
please be sure to access the documents there. You’ll be able to download and modify
these tools to fit your particular needs. (Please note that you’ll need to create an account
using your unique PIN in order to access this content online.)
Website: The site serves as the main forum for continuing conversations and sharing
insights on all things Teach Like a Champion through Lemov’s Field Notes blog. The Teach
Like a Champion team also shares fantastic free resources on this site, ready to be
downloaded and tailored to fit your needs. These include lesson materials, practice
activities, student work samples, classroom snapshots, and mini training materials. You’ll
also find information about Uncommon School’s workshops as well as their online
training modules, called Plug and Plays.
Version 1.0 outtakes: One of the hardest parts of revising Teach Like a Champion was
dropping things that were important and useful in order to make room for things that
were more so. For some readers, those sections will be sorely missed. For this reason, the
website will include a section where key content from the first version remains accessible.
To access outtake material, simply sign in to Your Library at http://teachlikeachampi-
on.com/yourlibrary/.
Social media: You can find Doug Lemov and the Teach Like a Champion team
through these major social media accounts:
www.facebook.com/TeachLikeAChampion
@TeachLikeAChamp
@Doug_Lemov