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Page 1: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out
Page 2: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.

Thought-out planning is better than decision made on the spot.

If you don’t know what you are doing next, teaching becomes frustrating.

Lack of planning can waste time and create class management problems.

Page 3: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Sometimes teachers resist planning, especially writing out their plans, because they are so busy with immediate responsibilities.

“An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.”

Page 4: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Sunshine State Standards and Grade Level Expectations

Adopted textbook, teacher’s guide, ancillary materials

Technology resources Ideas from other teachers, media specialist Parent resources Community resources Information on the background of diverse

students School calendar (essential holidays)

Page 5: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out
Page 6: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

First, read carefully the standards or curriculum framework of your state and local school district.

Look at the framework’s goals, which are the broad statements of desired outcomes.

Promoting good citizenship is generally listed first. We should focus on moving students toward effective citizenship participation.

Page 7: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

To acquire knowledge from the social sciences, history, and humanities.

To develop skills to think and process information.

To develop appropriate democratic values and attitudes.

To have opportunities for citizenship/social participation.

Page 8: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Rough out an outline of the entire curriculum

Look for integration connections/ideas Teacher’s personal beliefs Long range planning is critical because

there is usually far more content than time to teach it.

Page 9: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Skim the text, looking at broad titles. Decide which ones you will use.

Decide which units will receive major emphasis or minor emphasis.

Examine the teacher’s guide. Look for activities for you and your students.

Find other activities to supplement the text. Decide whether you will use the tests

supplied by the publisher for evaluation.

Page 10: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Following constructionist ideas, you will want to find out what your students’ prior knowledge.

The purpose of planning is not to just focus on the teacher but to promote student learning.

Page 11: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Whereas a goal is a broad statement of purpose, content standard or instructional objective is a specific accomplishment that you want your students to achieve in a specific period.

1)What are your standards or objectives?2)What learning experiences will be used to

achieve the desired objectives?3)What evaluation procedures will be used to

determine whether the objectives have been achieved?

Page 12: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Objectives, instruction, and evaluation should all be connected or coordinated with each other. This is called curriculum alignment.

Poor alignment can occur when the objective doesn’t match the instruction. For example, when the objective is improved thinking skills but the learning activities do not involve the students in thinking.

Page 13: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Traditional Practice Standards-Based Practice

Formulate objectives Design instructional

activities; what resources will I need?

Plan and give an assessment; often summative

Check to see if objectives have been reached. If necessary, reteach, modify next lesson or unit

Give grades to students

Select standard that students need to know

Design an assessment that allows each student to demonstrate what he/she knows or can do

Design appropriate learning activities with resources needed for all students to achieve the standard

Give assessment; use rubric Use data to drive instruction

Page 14: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Look at the desired results first Look at assessment evidence (how will

students demonstrate what they have learned or can do?)

Select learning activities (what opportunities will the students have to learn?)

Page 15: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Especially in schools defined as “failing,” principals and other trainers have asked that teachers post the standard that they are teaching and that students, when asked know the standard. In a few cases, students actually write the number of the standard on their assignments. Why is this being done? Do you think this is a good idea?

Page 16: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Title and Description Rationale/Overview for the unit; significance of topic; tie

to standards Estimated time Goals and Objectives Lessons Introductory and initiating activities (Series of sequence

lesson plans with enough detail on procedures so that the teaching strategies and activities are clear. Worksheets and similar handouts should be included.)

Concluding activities to encourage students to apply what they have learned

List of resources Assessment, including pre-assessment

Page 17: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

Consider various learning styles and abilities

Plan your lesson for the whole class Adapt your lesson plan to specific learners

by pairing, allowing alternatives, giving more time, rewriting questions, using graphic organizers, reducing complexity, and so on. For the gifted, make lessons more challenging.

Consider ELL accommodations

Page 18: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

What can you do to capture students’ attention?

Students’ interest and involvement may be triggered by an artifact, a learning game, or a planned classroom activity.

Beginnings are extremely important! What magic trick do you have up your

sleeve?

Page 19: The teacher is the decision maker and it is her job to decide on what units to include during the year or what tomorrow’s lesson plan will be.  Thought-out

End each lesson with a sense of accomplishment.

Will you depend on the bell to close each lesson or leave them dangling in mid-thought?

A better way is to draw attention to the end of the lesson, to help students organize their learning, and to reinforce what they have learned. Have students summarize the lesson for the class, or do so yourself!