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Effective Lesson Planning

This document provides guidance on effective lesson planning for teachers. It emphasizes that effective teachers know their content, understand student development, value diversity, and engage in ongoing professional growth. A good lesson plan includes objectives aligned to standards, engaging introductions, clear procedures, necessary materials, guided and independent practice, and assessments. It stresses the importance of planning to stay organized, meet objectives, and provide structure for substitute teachers.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
164 views

Effective Lesson Planning

This document provides guidance on effective lesson planning for teachers. It emphasizes that effective teachers know their content, understand student development, value diversity, and engage in ongoing professional growth. A good lesson plan includes objectives aligned to standards, engaging introductions, clear procedures, necessary materials, guided and independent practice, and assessments. It stresses the importance of planning to stay organized, meet objectives, and provide structure for substitute teachers.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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EFFECTIVE TEACHERS A Good Lesson includes:

 Know the content  TEKS


 Understand the development of the student  Objective – expected student behaviour
 Value the diversity of the students  Warm-up & instruction
 Use multiple assessments to evaluate progress  Procedure
 Create a suitable learning  Materials – worksheets, film, text, etc
 Adapt & modify instruction  Presentation
 Use effective communication  Practice
 Application
 Collaborative with all members of the learning
 Closure
community
 Evaluation – test, assignment, teacher observation
 Engage in sustained professional growth experiences
 Maximize Instructional Time
Instructional Planning & Strategies
 Integrate Diverse Teaching Strategies
 Plans are developed to provide students with
meaningful learning experience  Have All Students On Task
 Plans connect to related learning opportunities
LET’S BEGIN
 Teaching is based instructional strategies that focus on
 The format of a lesson should
best practice & research
 Go one step at a time
 Teaching is supported by strategies that foster interest
 Have a picture for every step
& progress
An effective lesson plan is a set of plans for building
General policy
something – it “constructs” the learning
 Plans are a legal document
 Usually required weekly to the supervisor
The greater the structure of a lesson & the more precise
 Plan books (district, purchased, self-made notebooks) the directions on what is to be accomplished, the higher
 Substitute plans the achievement rate. Harry Wong, The First Days of
 Must include Teaching
 TEKS
 Objectives OBJECTIVES
 Needed materials  A description of what the student will be able to do at
 Bell ringer the end of the lesson
 Procedures  Provides alignment with district & state goals (TEKS)
 Closing  Use behavioural verbs to describe the expected
outcomes (ACTION)
Good Planning  No-no’s: appreciate, enjoy, love
 Keeps the teacher & students on track
 Achieves the objectives Warm-up & Introduction
 Helps teachers to avoid “unpleasant” surprises  Grab the attention of the students
 Provides the roadmap & visuals in a logical sequence  Provides the interest/motivation factor
 Provides direction to a substitute  Set the tone for the lesson connected to the objective
 Encourages reflection, refinement, & improvement  A question
 Enhances student achievement  A story
 A saying
Poor Planning  An activity
 Frustration for the teacher & the learners  A discussion starter
 Aimless wandering Be creative
 Unmet objectives
 No connections to prior learning PRE-ASSESSMENT
 Disorganization  What are the characteristics of the learners in the class?
 Lack of needed materials  What do the students already know & understand?
 A waste of time  How do my students learn best?
 Poor management  What modifications in instruction might I need to
make?
PROCEDURES & PRESENTATION EVALUATION
 Sets up a step-by-step plan  Assess the learning-rubric
 Provides a quick review of previous learning  Teacher made test
 Provides specific activities to assist students in  In-class or homework assignments
developing the new knowledge  Project to apply the learning in real-life situation
 Provides modelling of a new skill  Recitations & summaries
 A picture is worth a thousand words.  Performance assessments
 I do, We do, You do!  Use of rubrics
 Portfolios
MATERIALS  Journals
 Plan! Prepare! Have on hand!  Informal assessment
 Murphy’s Law
 Envision your needs REFLECTION
 List all resources  What went well in the lesson?
 Have enough manipulatives (when needed) for groups  What problems did I experience?
or individuals)  Are there things which I could have done differently?
 How can I build on this lesson to make future lessons
PRACTICE successful?
APPLYING WHAT IS LEARNED
 Provide multiple learning activities THE SUBSTITUE…NOW WHAT?
 Guided practice (teacher controlled)  The key to substitute success –
 Use a variety of questioning strategies to determine DETAILED LESSON PLANS
the level of understanding  Discipline routines
 Journaling, conferencing  Children with special needs
 Independent practice  Fire drill & emergency procedures
 Practice may be differentiated  Helpful students, helpful colleagues (phone #’s)
 Build on practice  Classroom schedule
 Name of administrators
LEARNING ACTIVITIES  Expectations for the work
- Graphic Organizers  Packet of extra activities
- Creative play
- Peer presenting LESSON PLANS: Review
- Performances
- Role playing Reflection/Open Discussion
- Debates  Main components of a lesson plan
- Game making  Critical thinking skills
- Projects  Characteristics of a good lesson
- Cooperative groups  Teacher responsibilities
- Inquiry learning
- Direct instruction Bloom’s Taxonomy
- Differentiation  Use daily in questioning to develop higher order of
- Direct instruction thinking skills…critical thinking skills
 Knowledge
CLOSURE  Comprehension
 Lesson Wrap-up: Leave students with an imprint of  Application
what has been covered in the lesson  Analysis
 Students summarize the major concepts  Synthesis
- Displays internalized student knowledge  Evaluation
 Teacher recaps the main points
 Teacher sets the stage for the next phase of learning
Bloom’s Taxonomy
KNOWLEDGE COMPREHENSION APPLICATION
- Remembering - Interpreting - Problem solving
- Memorizing - Translating from one medium to - Applying information to produce
- Recognizing another some result
- Recalling (identification & recall of - Describing in one’s own words - Use of facts, rules & principles
information) - Organization & selection of facts - How is…an example of….?
- Who, what, when, where, how…? and ideas - How is…related to….?
- Describe - Retell - Why is…significant?

ANALYSIS SYNTHESIS EVALUATION


- Subdividing something to show - Creating a unique, original product - Making value decisions about
how it is put together that may be in verbal form or may issues
- Finding the underlying structure of be a physical object - Resolving controversies or
a communication - Combination of ideas to form a new differences of opinion
- Identifying motives whole - Development of opinions,
- Separation of a whole into - What would you predict/infer judgements or decisions
component parts from…? - Do you agree…?
- What are the parts or features of…? - What ideas can you add to…? - What do you think about…?
- Classify…according to… - How would you create/design a - What is the most important…?
- Outline/diagram… new…? - Place the following in order of
- How does…compare/contrast with? - What might happen if you priority…
- What evidence can you list for…? combines…? - How would you decide about…?
- What solutions would you suggest - What criteria would you use to
for…? assess…?

GREAT TEACHING starts with GREAT PLANNING 5 Important Things a Teacher can DO for her Students
Characteristics of great lesson plans  Care
 Clear instructions, explanations, timelines, expectations  Set high expectations
and assessment  Create orderly, structured classroom
 Interactive; hands on activities  Earn respect – stay calm, exercise self-control
 Engaging and FUN!  Treat each student with courtesy & respect
 Allow students to feel sense of shared exploration and
discovery LESSON PLAN: Preparation Summary
 Give students choices DO’s DON’T’s
- Always date your plans - Do overly concise, use
Students engaged & motivated - Indicate daily plans (even verbs & highly descriptive
 Break assignments into small chunks if carrying over activities) phrases
 Hands-on manipulatives - Indicate open-ended - Hesitate to embrace a
writing & critical thinking typeset format.
 Ask open ended questions activities (daily for LA/Lit, Reference Staff
 Make lesson relevant weekly for Math, Science Handbook for sample
 Allow students to develop own questions to research & Social Science - Write illegibly, if not
 Integrate diverse teaching strategies - When appropriate, indicate typing.
 Talk at appropriate level specific exercises for Ask
- Plan differentiated
instruction
SET STUDENT GOALS
- Closely correlate NJ Core
They’re all about High Expectations Curriculum Content
Keys to great goal setting Standards
 Regular routine – “mini goals” – focus on small, - Indicate where Crisis
immediate, action-oriented Management folder can be
 Very specific actions – what, when, how? found
 Level Appropriate
 Followed by reflection – students need to evaluate –
leads to feeling of accomplishment & future goal
setting

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