5.lesson plan example

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    Unit 5

    Lesson #4

    PLANNING

    I. Rationale

    The French Revolution marks a time in history where changes in society were triggered by the

    growing concerns of citizens in regard to the country's financial crisis and inequalities

    established by the heirarchial Old Order. This lesson takes part within a Unit series that aims to

    answer the essential question: how does change both help and poison a society? In building

    toward a conclusion for the essential question, this lesson is designed for students to identify and

    expand on the causes and events of a the revolution taking place in France during 1500s-1800's.

    Students will practice their reading comprehension and creative writing skills to identify,

    describe, and contrast different points of view in regard to conditions in France leading up to and

    during the revolution.

    II. Assumptions about the lesson, content or studentsStudents will come to this lesson having knowledge of:

    1. Transformations occurring in Eruope during this era, including exploration, the printing press,

    expansion, the scientific revolution and enlightement ideas. This prerequisite knowledge will

    help students understand the context of Europe to understand developments in France.

    2. Prior developments resulting in the changing nature of what is knowledge and where to get

    knowledge from.

    3. Practice with thinking and writing from a particular perspective, most recently from the

    American Revolution lesson. These skills are essential for this lesson's activity.

    Students may have difficulty with:

    1. We have never done the Two Voices lesson before, so it may take awhile explaining

    the outcomes for the assignment. It's important to spend time modeling the sample Imade up for students to see and ask questions before hand.

    Students have had experience and input with:

    1. We have done creative writing before which had positive outcomes. Students like

    pretending to take on roles of others and make use out of sharing their writing with

    peers. Also, students have in the past liked sharing their views on current issues and

    therefore the warm-up part of the lesson will give them this opportunity again and help

    them connect the material to their ideas.

    III. Learning Objectives:

    By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:1. Identify the characteristics of pre-revolution France and explain how components of

    the Old Order and absolutism led to the development of a revolution triggered by resentment

    and the spread of enlightenment ideas among the Third Estate.

    2.Synthesize causes and events of the revolution by writing a perspective piece that

    distinguishes the outlooks of a member from the Third Estate with that of King Louis or

    Marie Antoinette.

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    Alignment with National/State Standards:

    Analyze the economic, political and social transformations in Europe by explaining how

    Democratic ideas and Revolutionary conflicts influenced European society, noting their

    influence on education, family life and the legal position of women. (WHG 6.3.1)

    V. Specific Design:

    Warm-up, recitation, pair or independent reading, checking for understanding, writing activity,

    peer sampling, in-class sharing (if time).

    VI. Materials Needed:

    Doc Cam, Smart Board, Prezi power point presentation, Youtube,Human Legacy textbook,paper & pencils.

    SPECIFIC LESSON DESIGN (in narrative format)

    Lesson Outline (70 minutes)

    1Introduce hook of lesson through student's daily journal warm-up questioning. The warm-up

    for this lesson will ask students to brainstorm the following;

    (1) issues currently happening in society they feel strongly either for or against.

    (2) identify the groups involved in this issue (those targeted and those that target).

    (3) predict factors that may cause resistance toward this issue.

    2.Volunteers share.3.Read about the Old Order, causes and events of the French Revolution in small groups.

    4.Brief Prezi power point going over major concepts, recitation style.

    5.Go over reading and check for questions.

    6.Introduce the Two Voices assignment by presenting a model of the format on the Doc Cam

    for class to see.

    7.Have students work in on assigment indepentently at first and set time aside for peer sampling.

    8.Have students share their writing for the class, time permitting.

    9.Debrief/Closure ,seminar style.

    III. Closure

    Have students reflect on why assignment was built to incorporate two persepctives looking at the

    same event. Ask how change was viewed differently by social groups, and whether the change

    was more positive than negative overall. Ask students how it relates to their warm-up questions.

    IV. Assignment Description

    Two Voices is designed to engage students in their own creative thinking and writing as well as

    to display their understanding of the content. Because working on literacy is important for

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    content learning, this gives students practice with their reading comprehension and writing. It

    pushes students to think about the content more deeply as they write about certain events from

    the viewpoints of two different voices; it juxtapositions members of differing social classes by

    presenting reality in opposing ways to help students understand the significance of perspective

    when thinking about historical and current issues.

    V.Accommodations

    Have students summarize each event labeled on a graphic organizer so they can visualize it.

    Have students choose one event and write how a peasant would view it vs. how the King would

    view it in a chart format.

    VI.Reflection