If people don't know each other's names, it's hard to call a group a community.
Learning and remembering everyone's name is a sign of respect. Taking time to
discover who we are in a group always pays off. The more we know about each
other, the more comfortable we feel working with each other.
If you've got four to six classes of students, learning students' names is no
easy feat. Yet, like meet and greet, this is one of those
practices that makes a tremendous difference to students. Too often, students
tell me about teachers who still don't know their names by the end of first
semester. How you learn names may depend on your room set-up and the memory
devices that work for you. The following suggestions come from teachers who
have learned everyone's name within two weeks.
At the start of the school year, have students say their first names
every time they speak.
Have students create triangular name plates out of 8 1/2" x 11" card stock.
Ask students to fold the sheet into three long strips. Then ask them to write
their first names in large letters on the middle strip. Then fold the sheet
into a triangle that will stand on its own in front of the table or desk where
each student is sitting. Have a box for each set of name tags and ask students
to pick them up and return them to the box each period.
If students have name tags, ask them to come in and mix up where they sit.
Then pass out the name tags to each student as you greet them.
When students are writing, reading quietly, or working in pairs or small
groups, spend this time saying each person's name silently three times as your
eye roams from one end of the room to the other. Keep the same order of saying
names a couple of times, and then try to connect names with faces randomly in
no particular pattern.
Link a word that begins with the same consonant as the student's first
name to each student any word that describes something positive about
that student.
Tell students they can't enter your classroom until you say their names
correctly. Give students bonus points if you can't remember.
Take a head shot picture of each student. Ask volunteers from
each of your classes to create a photo collage, either assembling them in a
framed space on a bulletin board or gluing photos and names on a large
cardboard pizza round to hang from the ceiling.
Do a name game or introduction game:
Silent Alphabet or Birthday: Line up silently by birthday
(January to December) or by First or Last Name alphabetically and then have
students say their names or birthdays.
Name Toss: On a 5 x 8 note card, ask everyone to write one
word that begins with the first letter of their first name that reflects
something about them (i.e. Carol= creative). In a circle ask everyone to say
their name, the word, and the connection they have to the word. Place the
cards in the center of the circle. Using a timer, ask for three volunteers to
see how long it will take them to return the correct card to the person who
wrote it. Do this a number of times to see if successive groups can beat the
previous time.