#  Circulating the room to elicit participation 

 



##  Circulating the room to elicit participation 

Although the physical setup of a classroom typically points toward a lectern or podium, moving around the space intentionally can send important nonverbal signals to students. In this video, Dan Levy describes how he rarely stays “tethered to the front of the room,” especially when trying to elicit participation, stimulate debate, or encourage a particular student to venture deeper on a particular point.

*Profiled:* [*Dan Levy*](https://prod-instructionalmoves.drupalsites.harvard.edu/dan-levy)*, Senior Lecturer in Public Policy, teaches "Advanced Quantitative Methods" to 74 students at the Harvard Kennedy School.*



 

 

 

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 Classroom Considerations Relevant Research Related Resources 

## Classroom Considerations

 

 

- Engage with students throughout the room both verbally and nonverbally. Making eye contact with students who are not front and center welcomes all students into the fold rather than the select few.
- Be expressive. Students are more likely to pay attention to instructors who employ vocal variation, humor, facial expression, movement, and gesturing.
- Plan your routes. Pick a couple of paths you might take in your classroom and consider how standing in those places might change the gaze and attention of your students.



 



 

 

 

## Relevant Research

 

 

- In a review of instructor enthusiasm, Keller and colleagues define teacher enthusiasm to include nonverbal expressiveness elements such as movement and high levels of energy ([2016](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10648-015-9354-y))
- Educational psychology students were asked to identify and analyze two recent class periods, one where they were motivated and one where they were not. Students consistently ranked instructor enthusiasm as most important for motivation ([Sass, 1989](https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1207/s15328023top1602_15))
- According to Wolfe, the brain is more likely to attend to stimuli that is intense, novel, or incorporates movement ([2001](https://www.ascd.org/books/brain-matters?variant=109073E4))



 



 

 

 

## Related Resources

 

 

- [“Teaching with Discussions”](https://ctl.wustl.edu/resources/teaching-with-discussions/) from The Teaching Center at Washington University in St. Louis offers tips for instructors before, during, and after discussion, including how to create a comfortable non-threatening environment from the first class onward
- In a related Instructional Move on ["Using the physical space to support a democratic philosophy"](https://instructionalmoves.gse.harvard.edu/using-physical-space-support-democratic-philosophy), Christina Villarreal discussed how she arranges her classroom and uses visual cues to "agentize" her students.



 



 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 See also:- [ Levy, Dan ](/instructors/levy-dan)
- [ Lecturing Interactively ](/modules/lecturing-interactively)
- [ Engaging Students ](/sub-modules/engaging-students)
- [ How can I execute my plans to ensure students stay engaged? ](/sub-modules/how-can-i-execute-my-plans-ensure-students-stay-engaged)
- [ Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) ](/school/harvard-kennedy-school-hks)