A Diamond Nine Diagram helps to prioritise and categorise key factors. The most important factors are placed towards the top of the "diamond 9 ". The least important factors are placed towards the bottom. Factors of equal importance are placed in the same row. Each factor can be colour coded for further sophistication.
History Diamond 9: Causes of the Russian Revolution
History Diamond9: German involvement in the Spanish Civil War
English Language Diamond9: Achieving the best results at GCSE
Business Studies Diamond9: The Process of Appointing Staff
History Diamond9: Why was the Triangular Trade not stopped until 1833?
History Diamond9: Causes of the Peasants' Revolt
Geography Diamond9: Consequences of Climate Change
Geography Diamond9: Consequences of Climate Change
Business Studies Diamond9: The process of appointing staff
History Diamond9: Slave Resistance
Geography Diamond9: Causes for the growing population
History Diamond9: Causes of the Peasants' Revolt
PSHE Diamond9: What makes a happy and healthy lifestyle?
PSHE Diamond9: To be the best we can be we all need...
Religious Education Diamond9: Churches
Individual students identify 9 factors which help to answer the key question. After a few minutes, the teacher "brainstorms" all the ideas onto the board.
Working individually (if each student has their own computer) or in small groups, students select the nine factors they consider the most important. These are typed into the diamond 9 diagram in no particular order.
Finally, students have to re-arrange the factors in their diagram so that the most important are towards the top, the least important towards the bottom. They explain their reasoning in the "notes" box and then print off / save their work as the basis of a piece of written work.
Students use the "colour picker" tool to colour-code the 9 factors into appropriate categories - for example, social factors could be in red, political in blue and so on.
Students should be encouraged to compare their diagrams: for example
(a) The teacher could ask one student to justify why they put a particular factor at the top of the diagram, and another student could then be asked why they placed the same factor at the bottom;
(b) Each member of the class should be asked their "most important" factor. These could be tallied up on the board against individual factors to get an overall "class view". This information could also be used as the basis of a debate.
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