
How to Teach with Inside-Outside Circle: Complete Classroom Guide
By Flip Education Team | Updated April 2026
Concentric circles rotate for rapid partner exchanges
Inside-Outside Circle at a Glance
Duration
15–25 min
Group Size
14–40 students
Space Setup
Open space for two concentric standing circles
Materials
- Discussion prompt cards
- Optional: note cards for students
Bloom's Taxonomy
SEL Competencies
Overview
Inside-Outside Circle is a cooperative structure developed by Spencer Kagan, one of the most influential figures in the cooperative learning movement of the 1980s and 1990s. Kagan's work was rooted in the observation that most classroom structures, even well-intentioned ones, create conditions where a minority of students do most of the cognitive and communicative work, while the majority wait, watch, and disengage. His cooperative structures, of which Inside-Outside Circle is one of the most elegant, were designed to create simultaneous active participation: everyone engaged at once, no one waiting, no one merely observing.
The physical structure of two concentric circles, inner circle facing outward, outer circle facing inward, each student paired with the person across from them, creates the conditions for rapid, sequential pairing. After a timed exchange, one circle rotates and each student is paired with a new partner. Over 15-20 minutes, students might exchange ideas with 4-6 different partners, each pairing producing a slightly different angle on the same topic. This diversity of perspectives is the method's primary contribution to understanding: repeated exposure to the same question through multiple different partners produces richer comprehension than any single extended exchange.
The diversity of exchange partners is the variable that most determines the intellectual quality of the session. When students are assigned to circles randomly, they encounter peers they wouldn't choose to talk to: peers who have processed the same content in different ways, who bring different prior knowledge, who have formed different initial interpretations. This diversity is precisely what makes the exchange productive. Partners who think similarly don't generate the cognitive conflict that produces deep learning; partners who think differently do.
Inside-Outside Circle works particularly well for topics where multiple interpretations or perspectives exist and genuine peer-to-peer exchange is likely to surface real difference of understanding. It's less suited to topics where there is one correct answer that all students either know or don't, or to review activities where the goal is simply accuracy checking rather than idea development. The format's design calls for the kind of question where students will arrive at the exchange with genuinely different initial ideas.
The note-taking element, often under-utilized in quick review applications of the method, is particularly valuable for discussion-quality applications. When students are asked to note what their partner said, they are required to listen rather than merely wait for their turn to speak. The listening demand is one of the most important social-academic skills the method can develop, and structuring for it through a recording requirement makes it non-optional.
Inside-Outside Circle is one of the few cooperative structures that explicitly involves physical movement as a pedagogical feature rather than just a logistical necessity. The rotation, one circle moving while the other stays still, is a form of embodied learning: the body moving signals that something has shifted, that a new exchange is beginning, that prior thinking should be reviewed and potentially revised. This physical dimension makes the method particularly effective for kinesthetic learners and for classes that have been seated for extended periods.
What Is It?
What is Inside-Outside Circle?
Inside-Outside Circle is a kinesthetic cooperative learning strategy that maximizes student-to-student interaction by placing learners in two concentric circles facing one another. This methodology works because it forces every student to participate simultaneously, reducing the 'hiding' common in whole-group discussions while providing repeated opportunities to practice academic language and retrieve information. By rotating one circle, students engage with multiple partners, which lowers the affective filter and builds social and emotional skills alongside content mastery. The physical movement associated with the rotation helps maintain engagement and cognitive focus. This structure is particularly effective for formative assessment, as teachers can circulate and overhear multiple peer-to-peer explanations in a short timeframe. It transforms the classroom into a dynamic environment where students are the primary drivers of knowledge exchange, ensuring that even the most reluctant speakers are supported by the one-on-one, low-stakes format.
Ideal for
Steps
How to Run Inside-Outside Circle: Step-by-Step
Prepare Prompts
Develop a series of open-ended questions, flashcards, or problems that students will discuss or solve with their partners.
Form Concentric Circles
Divide the class in half and direct one group to form a circle facing outward, while the second group forms a circle around them facing inward.
Pair Students
Ensure every student in the inner circle is standing directly across from a partner in the outer circle.
Pose the Question
State the discussion prompt clearly and provide a specific amount of time (e.g., 30-60 seconds) for the pairs to interact.
Facilitate the Exchange
Monitor the room as students share, ensuring both partners have time to speak and listen during the interval.
Rotate the Circle
Signal the outer circle to move a designated number of steps (e.g., 'two people to the right') to meet a new partner.
Debrief and Reflect
Conclude the activity by bringing the class back together to share key insights or common themes discovered during the rotations.
Pitfalls
Common Inside-Outside Circle Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Not having enough different questions
Rotating through the same question multiple times gets stale quickly. Prepare a different question or prompt for each rotation, or have students generate their own question to carry around the circle. Variety sustains engagement through multiple rounds.
Rotation logistics that eat instructional time
Moving 30 students in concentric circles takes practice. Teach the rotation pattern before the content session. Clear signals (clap once = inside circle moves clockwise one position) save several minutes per rotation.
Shallow exchanges because of time pressure
Pairs who feel rushed produce surface-level responses. Give enough time per rotation for both partners to fully respond, 2-3 minutes minimum. Brief, rushed exchanges don't build the understanding the method is designed to create.
No synthesis of learning across partners
Students have rich conversations but don't consolidate what they learned. At the end, pause and ask students to write: the most interesting thing they heard from any partner, and something their conversations changed or deepened in their thinking.
Using it only for review
Inside-Outside Circle is often used only at the end of a unit for review. It's equally powerful mid-unit when students are forming ideas. Hearing a peer's interpretation of a concept before yours is fully formed can significantly shape understanding.
Examples
Real Classroom Examples of Inside-Outside Circle
Analyzing Character Traits in 'Hatchet' (Grade 6)
Ms. Chen's 6th-grade ELA class just finished reading 'Hatchet.' To review Brian Robeson's character development, students form Inside-Outside Circles. Ms. Chen asks, 'Describe one character trait Brian develops through his experiences in the wilderness and provide text evidence.' After a minute, the outer circle rotates. The next question might be, 'How does Brian's perspective change from the beginning to the end of the novel?' This allows students to share different insights and evidence, reinforcing their understanding of literary analysis and character arcs.
Reviewing Photosynthesis & Cellular Respiration (Grade 9 Biology)
Mr. Harrison's 9th-grade biology students need to differentiate between photosynthesis and cellular respiration. He uses Inside-Outside Circles. His first prompt is, 'What are the main reactants and products of photosynthesis?' After discussion and rotation, the next prompt is, 'Explain how cellular respiration is the inverse of photosynthesis.' Subsequent rotations might focus on where these processes occur in a cell or their importance to ecosystems. This rapid-fire exchange solidifies their grasp of these fundamental biological processes.
Debating Causes of World War I (Grade 11 History)
For a review of World War I's origins, Mr. Davies' 11th-grade history class uses Inside-Outside Circles. Students are given a card with one 'cause' (e.g., Imperialism, Militarism, Alliance System, Nationalism). The first question is, 'Explain your assigned cause and how it contributed to the war.' After rotation, the next question might be, 'Which cause do you believe was most significant, and why?' This fosters debate, critical thinking, and the ability to articulate historical arguments with evidence.
Practicing Algebra Vocabulary (Grade 7 Pre-Algebra)
Mrs. Rodriguez's 7th-grade pre-algebra class needs to solidify their understanding of algebraic terminology. She uses Inside-Outside Circles. The first prompt is, 'Define 'variable' and give an example.' After a rotation, the next prompt is, 'Explain the difference between an 'expression' and an 'equation'.' Subsequent rotations could cover terms like 'coefficient,' 'constant,' or 'like terms.' This ensures every student practices defining and using key vocabulary in context, building confidence before tackling complex problems.
Research
Research Evidence for Inside-Outside Circle
Kagan, S.
1994 · Kagan Publishing, San Clemente, CA (Book)
The structure ensures equal participation and individual accountability by requiring every student to respond to a prompt during every rotation.
Johnson, D. W., Johnson, R. T.
2009 · Educational Researcher, 38(5), 365-379
Face-to-face promotive interaction, as seen in circle structures, significantly increases achievement and higher-level reasoning compared to competitive or individualistic efforts.
Gillies, R. M.
2016 · Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 41(3), 39-54
Structured peer interaction models like the Inside-Outside Circle enhance student engagement and the development of social skills through mediated dialogue.
Flip Helps
How Flip Education Helps
Printable prompt cards and response scaffolds
Get a set of printable prompt cards designed for both the inside and outside circles, along with response scaffolds to guide student interactions. These materials provide the structure for multiple rounds of peer-to-peer discussion. Everything is formatted for quick printing and distribution.
Standards-based prompts for rapid peer exchange
Flip generates prompts that are directly tied to your curriculum standards and lesson topic. Each round is designed to explore a different aspect of the subject, ensuring students engage with the content multiple times in one session. The AI tailors the prompts to your grade level.
Facilitation script and numbered rotation steps
The generation includes a briefing script to set the stage and numbered action steps with teacher tips for managing the circle rotations. You receive intervention tips for ensuring productive conversations and helping students who struggle with the quick pace. This structure keeps the activity moving smoothly.
Reflection debrief and individual exit tickets
End the session with debrief questions that help students synthesize the different perspectives they heard during the rotations. The printable exit ticket provides a way to assess individual learning from the peer exchanges. A final note links the activity to your next curriculum goal.
Checklist
Tools and Materials Checklist for Inside-Outside Circle
Resources
Classroom Resources for Inside-Outside Circle
Free printable resources designed for Inside-Outside Circle. Download, print, and use in your classroom.
Inside-Outside Circle Discussion Log
Students record their key talking points, their partner's response, and how their thinking shifted across multiple rotations.
Download PDFInside-Outside Circle Reflection
Students reflect on how multiple brief face-to-face conversations with different partners shaped their understanding.
Download PDFInside-Outside Circle Role Cards
Assign roles to structure the paired conversations and rotations in the concentric circle format.
Download PDFInside-Outside Circle Discussion Prompts
Ready-to-use prompts designed for the face-to-face rotation format, from warm-up through synthesis.
Download PDFSEL Focus: Social Awareness in Inside-Outside Circle
A card focused on active listening and perspective-taking during rapid face-to-face partner rotations.
Download PDFTemplates
Templates that work with Inside-Outside Circle
SEL
A social and emotional learning template built around the CASEL framework's five competencies: self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making.
unit plannerSEL Unit
Plan a Social and Emotional Learning unit that develops CASEL competencies through structured reflection, community-building activities, and skill practice, integrated into your classroom culture rather than added on top of it.
rubricSEL Rubric
Build an SEL rubric that assesses CASEL competency development through observable behaviors and student reflection. Designed to support growth and self-awareness, not compliance or surveillance.
curriculum mapSEL Map
Map SEL skill development across the full year, sequencing CASEL competencies, integrating SEL into academic subjects, and building the relational culture that makes social and emotional learning stick.
Teaching Wiki
Related Concepts
Topics
Topics That Work Well With Inside-Outside Circle
Browse curriculum topics where Inside-Outside Circle is a suggested active learning strategy.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions About Inside-Outside Circle
What is the Inside-Outside Circle strategy?
How do I use Inside-Outside Circle in my classroom?
What are the benefits of Inside-Outside Circle for students?
How can I manage a classroom with an odd number of students?
What are common challenges when implementing Inside-Outside Circle?
Generate a Mission with Inside-Outside Circle
Use Flip Education to create a complete Inside-Outside Circle lesson plan, aligned to your curriculum and ready to use in class.












