SED 406:
Observation Assignment #2
In this observation assignment, your goal is to
reverse-engineer a lesson plan. Watch the class, and write the lesson plan that
teacher is using.
Do this by OBSERVATION, even if the teacher is willing to
share their lesson plan with you. This is about improving your observation
skills, not getting ‘the answer’.
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Lesson Plan Template
for SED 406 and 407
part 1 = planning
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Teacher Candidate:
Elizabeth Bitgood
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Subject:
World History 1
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Grade(s):
9th
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Name of Lesson:
Using primary sources/background
on Marco Polo
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Learning Objective(s), including Bloom's taxonomic level:
(label A, B, C, *D) *optional
The student will be
able to understand the advantages and disadvantages of using a primary source
when studying history. Students will
be able to understand the life and times of Marco Polo, and show this understanding
in an essay.
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Student Standards (GSE or/GLE or Common Core-in draft for
math/science- list which):
Rhode
Island State Standards for Social Studies: Grade 9RI.
2. History: Historical Comprehension., 2.b. The
student identifies the central question(s) the historical narrative
addresses. 2.d. The student evidences
historical perspectives.
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Teacher Standards (professional society and/or NETS and RIPTS-list which):
RIPTS
2. Teachers have a deep content knowledge base sufficient to create
learning experiences that reflect an understanding of central concepts,
vocabulary, structures, and tools of inquiry of the disciplines/content areas
they teach.
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Rationale: Why this lesson? How does it fit into the curriculum and context?
Is this the introduction, conclusion, or somewhere in the
middle of the unit of instruction?
This lesson is an
introduction to the topic of Mongol China.
It will introduce the culture, and feel of the time and place. Reading parts from Marco Polo’s book and
writing an essay on the topic will help with student comprehension of the
topic.
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Materials/Resources needed, including technology:
Do now packet,
Handouts, pen/pencil
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Accommodations and Modifications (special needs and learning
styles) For example:
Dr. Kraus has poor vision and needs written material to be at least 12
pt. font. He also reads two grade
levels higher and needs appropriate reading material.
No accommodations
were observed
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What content resources support this knowledge base? (list at
least 2)
Textbook, handouts
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How confident are you in this topic as you start this lesson?
The teacher seemed to
be confident in this lesson. He indicated
that he had taught it many times before.
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Lesson Plan Template
part 2 = action
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Bell-ringer: How will you get students seated, and ready for
academic work? (without your voice)
The teacher already
had the student’s DO NOW packets placed on their desks, indicating that they
should sit down and get started right away on the lesson.
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Anticipatory Set: How will you introduce the material, interest
the students, show relevance of topic?
The teacher
introduced the topic by having them answer a DO NOW question from their reading
on Mongol China. He then engaged the
class in discussion over the DO NOW question.
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Phase
(change as needed)/Time
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Teacher action
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Student action
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Questions/Assessments
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e.g. Intro/5 min.
5min
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Point out objectives and summarize the essay
they will have to write in a few days
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listen
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10min
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Told students to do
the DO NOW
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Answered the question
in their do now packet
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Presentation or
Open-ended/
10min
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Passed out handout on
primary/secondary sources
Read it to the
students
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Read along and fill
in the questions on the back
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Guided Practice or
Convergent/
65min
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Passed out anther
handout on Marco Polo, read it to the class, and worked as a group to answer
questions on Marco Polo.
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Listened and
responded to the questions on the sheet, copied down answers.
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Questions were on a
hand out
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Closing/
5min
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Stressed the importance
of the lesson towards writing the essay later in the week.
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listened
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HW/Application/
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none
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Review and Reflection: How will you review for students who
are still having trouble?
I would direct them
to read the handout and then show them how to get the answers from the text,
encourage small groups to work on the questions rather than as a class.
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Extension: What will you offer to students who have mastered
this?
Nothing was offered
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*Closing: How will you review the material, and draw conclusions? (may be
listed above)
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Lesson Plan Template
pt. 3 = reflection
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WHAT?
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What went well?
The students did read
the handout as a group so most of them did hear the information. The tricky vocabulary was written on the
board so that they would be able to understand the difficult words.
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What area of weakness needs addressing?
The class was not
engaged or all that interested in the assignment. As the class worked as a group many
students did not bother doing the work and simply copied the answers down
once the teacher went over the assignments.
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Which objectives were met? What is the evidence?
As this was one lesson
out of a three day lesion plan I did not see if the objectives were met
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Which students did not meet objectives?
The students in the
back of the room did not meet the objectives.
They had been talking during the whole lesion and did not copy down
the answers that the class came up with and the teacher wrote on the board.
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Was time managed appropriately?
Time was not managed
well as the final handout was not gotten to and was put off till the next
class.
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Did any teacher mannerisms or actions detract from the lesson?
The teacher spent a
great deal of time writing the answers to the questionnaire on the board to
share them with the class. His back
was turned to the students quit a lot of the time.
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*What were the strengths and weaknesses of classroom
management?
The teacher did not exhibit
much in the way of management. For example,
two girls were seated next to each other; they had moved their desks closer
to the other as well. These two girls
talked during the entire lesson. The
teacher did not move to separate them or quiet them. He would occasionally ask the students as a
group if they were paying attention,
and stress the importance of the lesson, but otherwise did not move to silence
any of the talking students.
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SO WHAT?
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Was the lesson engaging?
This lesion was not
very engaging to the students. Most
did not really participate and a few talked constantly throughout the class.
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*What did I learn from my peer observation (address at least
one aspect)
I learned that it is vitally
important to address any behaviors that interfere with the lesson. This teacher did not really do anything to
stop the constant chatter of students except raise his voice level to be
heard over the offending students.
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NOW WHAT?
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How will this experience influence your professional identity?
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How will it influence how you plan/teach/assess in the future?
This will influence me
because I saw how when a teacher tolerates non attention and student talk
during a lesion it continues and does not stop on its own. I will endeavor to make sure that I develop
better class room management skills to avoid a similar situation.
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