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LESSON PLANNING THE EASY WAY! Identify interests, TEKS Brainstorm (What do you wonder or What would
you like to know about) using a web format (see coming slide)
Identify curricular areas and create a curriculum web
Develop Activities and Put into lesson plan Locate materials Conduct activities Evaluate unit Keep the Ideas and materials that worked! Using Books to lesson plan!
Copyright by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
The Lesson Plan(handout/template)
TEKS Objective/Outcomes
(TSW) Rationale Lesson Plan
Anticipatory Set or Introduction Process
• Instructional strategies you will use to teach the lesson
• Questions (based on various levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy)
• Closure Bloom’s Taxonomy
Practice Materials/Equipment Area of Development
Physical SocialEmotional Intellectual
Accomodations Differentiated Learning
Styles Classroom Strategies Curriculum Integration Assessment/Evaluation Resources (APA)
9 - 5
Create Lesson Plans First do a brainstorming web (see next slide) Use your ideas from webbing Determine your basic curricula areas, such as
math, science, etc… Create a curriculum web putting in specific
activities under each curricula area (use your brainstorming web for ideas)
Create your lesson plan Detail your activities:
• Materials needed• Time needed• Domains of development covered
What is a lesson?
A lesson is the smallest individual piece of a concept, theme, or topic to be taught
A lesson should only include one element to avoid confusion or overload
Once students have mastered a lesson, the teacher can move on to the next piece
A lesson is NOT necessarily what can be covered in 45 minutes or bell-to-bell
Individual lessons make up a unit 7
The “what” for the lesson. What is(are) the expectation(s) for the student. What will they learn or be able to do as a result of the lesson?
Daily/Lesson objectives should align with your long-range goals and district curriculum and the TEKS
Example: The student will be able to correctly identify at least 45 of the 50 U.S. State Capitals on the unit exam.
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Objectives
TEKS (Objective) In Texas, you must list the TEKS addressed in
the lesson alongside the objective(s). If you can’t find a corresponding TEKS for your
objective, then DON’T teach it. Cite your TEKS as below:
6th Grade Mathematics: 111.22(b)(9)(B) – “Find the probability of a simple event and it’s compliment and describe the relationship between the two.” 9
Texas Essential Knowledge Skills
Parts of a Good Objective Conditions – under which the behavior is to
be performed Behavioral Verb – action word that connotes
an observable student behavior Criteria – specifies how well the student
must perform the behavior
10
Parts of a Good Objective
.
Use Bloom’s Taxonomy to Assist in Writing Objectives
Knowledge Comprehension Application Analysis Synthesis Evaluation
(See handout in back of Lab Manual)
9 - 11
Copyright by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Classroom Strategies Cooperative Groups Technology Independent
Activities Charts/Graphs/
Maps Problem Solving Peer tutoring
Hand-On Centers Simulation Lecture Whole-group
Activity Pairing
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Copyright by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Assessment An activity where the teacher formally
determines that students learned the knowledge or skills outlines in the lesson objective(s)
Lesson assessments should directly measure the objectives (TEKS)
Examples:• Test or exam, project, term paper,
presentation, rubric, written or verbal report, performance of understanding, activity
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Copyright by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
APA Format Citation Machine
http://citationmachine.net/index2.php
Include at least two resources – include one article or book and one on-line resource
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