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Understanding Lesson Plans

Understanding Lesson Plans. The THREE MAJOR Parts. Learning Objective Learning Activities Assessment. LEARNING OBJECTIVE Objectives come from curriculum. LEARNING ACTIVITIES Activities that guide students in understanding the objective concept. ASSESSMENT

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Understanding Lesson Plans

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  1. Understanding Lesson Plans

  2. The THREE MAJOR Parts • Learning Objective • Learning Activities • Assessment

  3. LEARNING OBJECTIVE Objectives come from curriculum. LEARNING ACTIVITIES Activities that guide students in understanding the objective concept. ASSESSMENT A final test to see if students have mastered the objective.

  4. 1 The OBJECTIVE

  5. The Learning Objective • Objective refers to expected or intended student outcomes. • Objectives are specific knowledge, skills, or attitudes that students are expected to achieve by the end of a lesson. • Objectives are measurable.

  6. AN OBJECTIVE MUST HAVE THREE SPECIFIC PARTS: • An OBSERVABLE behavior • Behavior or activity to be performed by the student • What students will be able to do • A CONDITION • Describe conditions under which the student will perform the behavior. • How they will be able to do it • An ACCEPTABLE LEVEL OF PERFORMANCE • The evaluation; the test • Degree of accuracy observed

  7. The Objective – Part 1~ an OBSERVABLE behavior ~ • States the purpose of the lesson – including a verb that showshow learning is going to take place • The teacher will be able to actuallyJUDGEif students are meeting/demonstrating the verb. • DOK (Norman Webb’s Depth of Knowledge: 4 part circle of understanding) • Bloom’s Taxonomy Chart (Benjamin Bloom’s Chart: 6 part chart of thinking levels)

  8. The Objective – Part 2~ the condition ~ • Explain HOW the behavior will be performed. • Think of circumstances, commands, materials, and directions that the student will be given to perform the behavior. • Examples: HOW will students be working? • “working independently” • “in a small group” • “without a calculator” • “within 10-minutes”

  9. The Objective – Part 3~ an acceptable level of performance ~ • What degree of accuracy should be observed? • Examples of accuracy: • within two inches of accuracy. • to the nearest whole number. • with no more than two incorrect entries in the log.

  10. AN OBJECTIVE MUST HAVE THREE SPECIFIC PARTS:

  11. When writing objective statements, ask yourself these questions: • Does the objective focus on student performance? • Is the task measurable or observable? • What criteria will I use to establish that the objective has been reached?

  12. ~ Good to Know ~ • Avoid words like understand, learn, and know. They are not measurable because there is no product involved. • Sometimes the degree of accuracy is implied by words such as correctly and successfully. • Not all lessons result in a tangible product. Therefore, when students verbally demonstrate their learning, the measurable action involves telling, explaining, or discussing.

  13. Sample Objectives • Given a list of vowels, tswwill say the correct sounds at 30 sounds per minute with no more than 2 errors. • Given pictures of clock faces with the hands in any position, tsw will accurately state the correct time in “minutes after the hour” in 9 of 10 trials. • Given a two-step direction, tsw will promptly follow both directions 4 out of 5 times.

  14. Sample Objectives • Given four works of short fiction of contrasting genres, the student will analyze and match each work with its correct genre.

  15. Sample Objectives • Given four works of short fiction of contrasting genres, the student will analyze and match each work with its correct genre.

  16. Sample Objectives • Using the washingtonpost.com Web site, the student will correctly identify and print out two examples each of a news article and an editorial regarding a topical new item.

  17. Sample Objectives • Using the washingtonpost.com Web site, the student will correctly identify and print out two examples each of a news article and an editorial regarding a topical new item.

  18. Sample Objectives • Given twenty examples of incorrect verb tense usage, the student will identify and correct a minimum of sixteen instances.

  19. Sample Objectives • Given twenty examples of incorrect verb tense usage, the student will identify and correct a minimum of sixteen instances.

  20. Write a three part objective using the topic beside each number with 95 percent accuracy. • Adding two digit numbers, any grade • A kindergarten reading skill • A third grade science skill • A second grade social studies skill

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