HSOE Lesson Plan Template: Grade Subject
HSOE Lesson Plan Template: Grade Subject
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban will facilitate a lesson that follows
our overarching theme of how to think critically about concepts of control,
power, and who has a say in what one becomes in this life and how they
become that.
LESSON SUMMARY This theme will be explored through a sorting hat activity in which students
will be ‘sorted’ into groups matching the four houses from the Harry Potter
universe.
After two 15 minute rounds of group activity, students will end the lesson by
applying themes from the activity to contemporary social events in their
journals to illustrate mastery of the day's topic.
APA Citations
Part I: What is Behaviorism? (Baum, 2004.). Retrieved July 12, 2020, from
https://www.scirp.org/reference/ReferencesPapers.aspx?ReferenceID=225002
0
Behaviorist Learning Theory. ( Culatta, 2015) Retrieved July 12, 2020, from
http://www.innovativelearning.com/teaching/behaviorism.html
OBJECTIVE.
What will your students be able to do?
Students will be able to analyze the impact of the author’s choices regarding how to develop and relate elements
of a story or drama (e.g., where a story is set, how the action is ordered, how the characters/archetypes are
introduced and developed).
Students will be able to site strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says
explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text, including determining where the text leaves matters
uncertain.
Students will be able to analyze multiple interpretations of a story.
By the end of the lesson, through review and discussion of a given text, I will determine central ideas, cite, and
locate supporting evidence with at least 80% accuracy, thus scoring at least 4 out of 5 on a grading rubric.
ASSESSMENT
How will you know whether your students have made progress toward the objective?
How and when will you assess mastery?
Use Formative Assessment this week (last week we used short-cycle assessment)
How will you know whether your students have made progress toward the objective:
One-Minute Essay: Two times slots will be allotted for one-minute essays to assess understanding of the text
material. These one-minute essays will be distributed in the middle of the class activity and will ask a question
about the given text (be more specific here) that can be answered in one to two minutes. A quick call on student
answers will allow me to take a quick assessment of where the classes comprehension level is at.
Hand Signal: I will ask students to use a thumbs up or thumbs down throughout the class period to bolster
continual assessment strategies when asking quick questions.
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.11-12.3: Analyze the impact of the author's choices regarding how to develop and
relate elements of a story or drama (e.g., where a story is set, how the action is ordered, how the characters are
introduced and developed).
DIFFERENTIATION
How will you differentiate your instruction to reach the diversity of learners in your classroom?
How will you address your English Learners?
List the specific strategies you will use.
EL: Provide copy of PowerPoint with visuals. Ongoing informal assessment to check for understanding.
Differentiated homework/classwork, including text or verbal response submitted in native language. Handouts
with graphics. Offer translator, if applicable. Text provided in native language, if available.
SN: Use of visuals; Digital lesson (self-paced w/playback); copy of PowerPoint w/visuals; Text frontloaded
w/Ed. Specialist - discussion points drafted into written form (used in discussion).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doxxfXqpKYA
At Risk: Provide audio version of text. Allow verbal answers during one-minute essay assessment rounds. Use
small groups to break up discussion of text into small sections. Meet with students at the beginning of the group
to assess prior-knowledge. Pre-teach and highlight potentially difficult vocabulary and concepts.
Gifted: Pre-test for prior knowledge and then present a quick mini lesson to the small group that tackles the most
difficult points of the lesson first. Administer higher level questions for one-minute essay rounds.
Potential Misunderstandings of
instructions: I will be sure to speak
clearly and ask for thumbs or thumbs
down as I am explaining instructions.
Potential Misunderstanding of
video/information: I will be sure to
ask students to not concentrate on
overt instances of control and power
(i.e. the fact that professor Lupin tells
them to get in line to meet the
Boggart) but instead to focus on the
more intangible forms of control (i.e.
the Boggart).
The video and lightning round will end
and now we move to Guided Practice.
HOMEWORK (if appropriate). How will students practice what they learned?
● Read chapters 18 and 19 of our book Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
● Find a current event article in any media that reminds you of major themes from our text. The theme can
be the one we’ve been concentrating on in class, which is the theme of power and control or you can
choose another theme. Write 2 pages in your journal about this current event and attach an article or
website as a citation.