147x Filetype PPTX File size 0.13 MB Source: www.ulm.edu
Lesson Planning Plans should be submitted at least 2 days before the observation. Lesson plans should be for lessons where you will teach new content for your supervisor to observe; it should not be a review or test day (Skowron, 2006). Plans should include all that you are planning for the lesson and include the use of technology for the presentation of the lesson (rating of 2) and student use of technology (a rating of 3 possible) (Hopson, Simms, & Knezek, 2001). Lesson plans should include more than 1 activity and more than 1 group size. There should be enough detail in procedures to explain the activities and some detail of what you will say and do, and what the students will be doing and learning (lesson content). Lesson Planning Every lesson should include HOTS questions and not just knowledge and comprehension questions. Every topic of any lesson presents opportunities for high order thinking (Pogrow, 1996). Every lesson should include review of previous learning to connect to new learning. Every lesson should have a purpose and importance and must be stated orally to the students. They want to know “why we got to learn this”. The objectives of the lesson must match with your GLEs or standards and benchmarks and include where the objective falls on Bloom’s Taxonomy (Forehand, 2005). Every lesson must have accommodations for diverse learners in the strategies chosen, group size, materials used, and assessment (Tomlinson, 2005). Lesson Planning All lessons should include a plan for remediation, early finishers, and enrichment (see ideas). Students needing remediation should not be given just some extra work to do and left alone. They need to work with someone until they grasp the concept. Break it down into smaller pieces. Give me depth of understanding here. There is a difference between early finisher activities and enrichment activities (see ideas). Early finishers are sometimes students who rush through their work, but often are students who learn fast. Don’t assume that you will not have early finishers. Early finishers can finish an activity early in the middle of a lesson or near the end. Plan for it. Lesson Planning Every lesson should include either informal or formal assessment. The informal assessment should be MORE than just asking questions. Use some sort of check list. Not every lesson needs to include homework, but the lesson your supervisor observes should (see your rubric). Not every activity, but every lesson must end with closure. Closure is the teacher asking students about their learning. Closure is NOT the teacher telling students what they did today or what they learned today or “Here’s your homework” (see closure ideas) Peter & Ryan, 2007). Every lesson should include a reflection of the lesson. Here’s an opportunity to be honest and realistic about your growth as a professional. There are strengths and weaknesses in every lesson. Remember: When you fail to plan well, …you plan to fail miserably. Implementation of the Lesson Plan There should be a daily routine for students when entering the class. It helps to have an agenda on the board so students know what will occur that day, and it keeps you focused. Have something for students to be doing as soon as they enter so that you may silently take roll. Now that you have their attention, state and/or point to the objective for the day’s lesson. Once you get them on the bus, they will need to know where they’re going, wouldn’t you? Have a physical signal that you use to get students’ attention. Mine is a raised open palm. When you implement activities, tell students what your expectations are for the activity, e.g. cooperative learning groups, games.
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