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Small Group Instruction Management

Managing your Small Group Schedule Display

I’ve changed up my small group and centers rotation display several times over the years. My first year, my partner teacher and I grouped between classes so we had several groups to manage. Our set up looked something like this (but with quite a few more places the students actually went to) and with three rotations each day. Every morning I’d move the center rotation cards so the students knew where they’d go when since we didn’t do the same schedule each day. It was taking me 5 minutes each morning to look at my chart I had hanging with my small group display and rearrange everything. While 5 minutes doesn’t seem like a lot, it adds up, and it’s just one more thing I was having to do each morning before the day started.  And, let’s face it, it didn’t happen many days.  I’d come in late from a meeting, or I’d just forget, or I’d spend my morning prepping for the day and just didn’t get to it in time. So then, I spent valuable instructional time doing it or explaining what the students’ centers rotations should be. Of course, student behavior wasn’t the best as they waited to find out what they were doing that day. My small group and centers rotation display just wasn’t working.

I realized that if I just made one Powerpoint with each day of the week as a new slide, it’d be done and my centers rotation would be much simpler. It has been a HUGE positive change for my mornings. It’s done. It’s ready.  I open the file, go to the slide, and then when we’re ready, I just change it into slideshow mode.  When we’re done, I escape out (of the file- not the room). 😉 I posted a picture of it on Instagram and Facebook last weekend.

I got a ton of responses from people who create the same thing or something similar for their small group rotations. I also got a ton of responses from people asking me to create one for them that they could buy. I spent some time brainstorming all the different names for reading centers and math centers that people go to and asked for feedback from others. But, finally, my Editable Centers Management Powerpoint was born! Centers Rotation Powerpoint & Google Slides

I’ve updated it several times over the years to continue to meet the needs of many classrooms. I’ve also provided a few blank templates so it can be customized. I’ve included most center options I think people need. It’s quick and easy to edit and saves you valuable personal or planning time throughout the year.  Once you have everything laid out the first time, it takes just a couple minutes to swap things out to update it as your groups change. And, the next year, it only takes a few extra minutes to set it up for the first time since you’ll likely follow many of the same systems.

138 different images are included for the background in 18 different designs.  Some are printed in designs like quatrefoil and chevron.  Others are simple and with bright colors. Each of the designs includes a blank slide, and one for each day of the week.

Centers Rotation Chart on a classroom monitor display

There are 56 different options for your literacy centers and math centers, plus 10 editable templates.  If the center names I’ve given don’t match your classroom terms, there are templates included to add your text on top to truly customize the Powerpoint for your needs! There are 4 different types of group names included (shapes, colors, numbers, letters) but most people customize it with their specific group names.

Because you are building this display to meet your needs, it works with any number of groups and rotations. I really wanted this to be something that worked for absolutely anybody so I set it up to be completely customizable.

Small Groups rotation chart on classroom laptop

I created a video to show you what’s included with my Editable Centers Rotation Powerpoint and how you can set it up and use it in your room. I walk you through how you can set it up as one slide per day as shown here, or as one slide per rotation. I also show you how to add the timers to time and signal your center rotations and transitions.

You can purchase my Editable Centers Rotation Powerpoint on TpT.

Centers Rotation Powerpoint & Google Slides

If you’re looking for help in how to schedule your reading groups, or how often to see each group, I created these charts a long time ago when I was an instructional coach.  One of the teachers I was working with struggled to quickly decide how to meet with each group when the group numbers didn’t match the rotation numbers.  I created these to help her figure out how often she could meet with each group, and which groups she should meet with each day.  The charts help you visualize how often you could see each group, and how to set things up so you’re seeing your neediest students most often (daily or nearly every day)

There are charts for 4-8 groups with 3 and 4 different sessions.  They’re meant to be a base in your planning to help you get a jump start, but of course they’re meant to be adjusted based on your kids’ needs and abilities.

Small Group Rotations Scheduling Charts

What do you use to manage your literacy centers?

Managing your centers rotation digitally

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