2/1/2006m. g. werts lesson planning pre-primer how to write a “drop dead” lesson plan

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2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

Lesson Planning Pre-Primer

How to write a “drop dead” lesson plan

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

What is a “drop-dead” lesson plan? A document that allows a substitute to step

over your dead body and continue the lesson achieving the same excellent results you would have achieved

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

A drop dead plan includes… Written documentation of what you are

going to do up to and including a script of the lesson

Complete thoughts Plan B (and C, D, E and F in some cases)

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

Basics Lessons should be planned with all

students in mind from the beginning. Lessons should be planned for individuals no

matter how many are in the group

Lessons are not in vacuums. You must know what the student knows before you write a plan.

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

Accommodations and/or modifications may be necessary for individual students

Planned accommodations and/or modifications should be written into the lesson plans

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

Lesson plans should include all the adults or other resources that are available

Use the diversity of students in your classroom as strength rather than a burden.

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

These should be self evident Lessons should be appropriate for the

students in the group Lessons must be age appropriate Lessons must be functional Lessons must be developmentally

appropriate

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

Lessons and activities A lesson is an opportunity to present

instruction on skills or knowledge that have been declared as important. Objectives on the IEP State Standards Student interest area Other???

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

Activities are part of a lesson and may have a variety of purposes: motivation, experience, elaboration of information, practice in the skill, integration of the skill into other domains, or generalization of the skill or knowledge.

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

Lesson plan format

1. Grade and level of the lesson

2. Standard Course of Study Objective(s)

3. Relevant IEP goals

4. Length of lesson time

5. What went before and what will come after this lesson

6. Subjective objective

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Lesson plan format (continued)

7. Materials needed

8. Focus/ Review

9. Teacher input

10. Guided practice

11. Independent practice

12. Closure

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Lesson plan format (continued)

13. Assessment

14. Analysis

15. Interpretation

16. Citation

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1. Grade and level of the lesson “This lesson is based on a fifth grade Standard

Course of study objective, modified for students working on a third grade level in an inclusive fifth grade language arts class.”

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2. Standard Course of Study Objective(s)

Pull these from the DPI web site

http://www.ncpublicschools.org/curriculum/FOURTH GRADE NORTH CAROLINA: GEOGRAPHY AND

HISTORY Competency goal 1. The learner will apply the five themes of

geography to North Carolina and its people. Objective 1.01 Locate, in absolute and relative terms, major

landforms, bodies of water and natural resources in North Carolina.

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

3. Relevant IEP goals From the individual IEPs There is a distinct possibility that these will be

different for each student. Yes. You will write the goal or goals for EACH

student in each plan. Reality check: Are there IEP goals that go with the

lesson?

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

4. Length of lesson time How long will you spend with this lesson?

How much time do you have, and How much can you afford to spend on this? How much time can you afford to remediate this

if the student does not master this now? What should it reasonably take to teach this

concept?

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

5. What went before and what will come after this lesson

e.g., Yesterday we reviewed the three parts of a paragraph (i.e., topic sentence, supporting details, and concluding sentence) and created a graphic organizer that students will use in today’s lesson as the basis for writing a paragraph. Tomorrow students will work with a partner to edit their paragraph using five questions.

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

6. Objective (more on this later) State what you intend for students do/learn as a

result of this lesson and the criterion for success Be specific e.g., “(Name) will write a paragraph that includes

a topic sentence, three supporting details, and a summary or concluding sentence, using the graphic organizer that they completed yesterday. To pass this assignment the student(s) must include a topic sentence, at least two supporting details and a concluding sentence.”

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7. Materials needed A complete list of what the teacher needs to

provide Paper Chalk Etc…

A list of the back up things the teacher must think about providing

Bulbs for the projectors Safety pins Etc…

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

8. Focus and Review List content/skills/concepts you will review. If this is an initial lesson, state how you will

focus their attention on this topic, activate their prior knowledge/experience motivate them to learn about this topic.

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9. Teacher Input Specify what you plan to teach/facilitate that will

promote student learning. What will you say What will you show What will you do

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10. Guided Practice Specify how you plan to help students refine,

clarify what it is you have just taught. What will you do to maximize the chance of

practice How much guidance will they need

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11. Independent Practice Specify what activities you plan to give students

opportunities to use the skill/concept/learning presented in this lesson.

Include how much of class time will be spent and/or how much out-of-school time.

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

12. Closure

Specify how you plan to end the lesson, providing a review/ summary of the key points.

How will you allow the students to come to some closure

How will you gather data on what they do mention and do not mention

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13. Assessment What assessment procedure will you use to

evaluate whether students met the lesson objective? You might use informal procedures, such as

error analysis, teacher-made quiz, systematic observation.

Include the assessment instrument you will use.

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

14. Analysis What did you learn about the students’

performance based on the assessment data you collected?

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What will you do next based on your analysis of the assessment data (e.g., reteach using X approach, move to the next new learning, provided additional practice using X)?

15. Interpretation

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16. Citation Include the reference for a research article

that reports the effectiveness of the intervention. Article must report data Research participants should be similar to the

student you are teaching

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

More on writing objectives…

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

Objective components:

CNBC

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CNBCConditions under which the skill

will be performed Where How With whom With accommodations, modifications Anything else

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CNBCName: Who will be learning

Use a name Lessons plans in special education are

INDIVIDUAL!

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CNBCBehavior: What will be learned

(what skill will be acquired?) Observable Overt Measurable

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CNBCCriterion for the student

How much How well By when

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

Extra teacher stuff materials you need students who may be extra help or enrichment logistics, strategies to use if the lesson bombs where to find the extra light bulbs for the

equipment what to do if your "friend" teacher has

borrowed the equipment from the class behavioral support plans

2/1/2006 M. G. Werts

Summary Lesson plans consist of “tell ‘ems”

1. Tell ‘em what you are going to do

2. Tell ‘em what you want them to know

3. Tell’ em what you did

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