20180425042319coe_lesson_plan_template_wk31 x
Complete the following Assignment:
1) Select a 1-5 grade level and NC state standard from the Measurement and Data domain.
2) Compose an aligning learning target for 3 students who would benefit from the use of augmentative and/or alternative communication devices (see below).
- Donnie is an African American female who wears hearing Aids. She is on grade level with no IEP/504. Medium support from parents. Internet available at home.
- Fredrick is a white male who has a Traumatic Brain Injury. He receives Tier 3 RTI services for reading and math because he is 2 grades below his grade level. His parents are very involved, no internet at his home.
- Wendell is an African American male who has a Learning Disability. He receives Tier 3RTI services for math because he is 2 grade levels below his grade. He is also 1 grade level below his grade in reading. Medium support for his parents. Internet is available in his home.
3) Complete a lesson plan (See template below) with the small group in mind, that specifies applicable assistive technology and includes differentiated activities to facilitate students making comparisons and uses models of measuring units or measuring instruments for representing or interpreting the data.
4) In addition to your completed lesson plan, rationalize your augmentative and/or alternative communication device choices in a 250-300-word summary. Support your choices with 2-3 scholarly resources
This template have instructions within the template, you can delete as you review
GCU College of Education
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
Teacher Candidate: Grade Level: Date: Unit/Subject: Instructional Plan Title |
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I. Planning |
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Lesson summary and focus: |
In a few sentences, summarize this lesson, identifying the central focus based on the content/skills you are teaching. |
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Classroom and student factors: |
Describe the important classroom factors (demographics and environment) and student factors (IEPs, 504s, ELLs, non-labeled challenged students), and the impact of those factors on planning, teaching and assessing students to facilitate learning for all students. |
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National / State Learning Standards: |
Identify the relevant grade level standard(s), including the strand, cluster, and standard(s) by number |
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Specific learning target(s) / objectives: Specify exactly what the students will be able to do after the standards-based lesson. |
Teaching notes: Clarify where this lesson falls within a unit of study. |
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Agenda: Identify the (1) opening of the lesson; (2) learning and teaching activities; and (3) closure that you can post as an agenda for the students that includes the approximate time for each segment. |
Formative assessment: Identify the process and how you will measure the progress toward mastery of learning target(s). |
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Academic Language: |
Key vocabulary: Include the content-specific terms you need to teach and how you will teach students that vocabulary in the lesson. |
Function: Clarify the purpose the language is intended to achieve within each subject area. Functions often consist of the verbs found in the standards and learning goal statements. How will your students demonstrate their understanding? |
Form: Describe the structures or ways of organizing language to serve a particular function within each subject area. What kinds of structures will you implement so that your students might demonstrate their depth of understanding? |
Instructional Materials, Equipment and Technology: |
List ALL materials, equipment and technology the teacher |
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Grouping: |
Identify grouping strategies that will support your students’ learning needs. |
II. Instruction |
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A. Opening |
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Prior knowledge connection: |
Identify how this lesson connects to previous lessons / learning (prior knowledge of students) and students’ lives. |
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Anticipatory set: |
Identify how this lesson is meaningful to the students and connects to their lives. |
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B. Learning and Teaching Activities (Teaching and Guided Practice): |
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I Do |
Students Do |
Differentiation |
Your “I Do” instructional procedures should include: The teaching strategy you will use to teach each step that includes modeling and formative assessment; transition statements you will make throughout your lesson and essential questions you will ask; and academic language of vocabulary, function, and form. Script detailed, step-by-step instructions on how you will implement the instructional plan. Use a numbered list of each step; bold every example of modeling; italicize every formative assessment. |
Your “Students Do” procedures should describe exactly what students will do during the lesson that corresponds to each step of the “I Do.” Please use a corresponding numbered list. |
Describe methods of differentiation, including accommodation or differentiation strategies for academically, behaviorally and motivationally challenged students. Please use a corresponding numbered list. Also include extension activities: What will students who finish early do? |
III. ASSESSMENT |
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Summative Assessment: |
Include details of any summative assessment as applicable and attach a copy with an answer key. Explain how the summative assessment measures the learning target(s)/objectives. If you do not include a summative assessment, identify how you will measure students’ mastery of the learning target(s)/objectives. |
Differentiation: Describe methods of differentiation for your summative assessment, including accommodation or differentiation strategies for academically, behaviorally and motivationally challenged students. |
Closure: |
Explain how students will share what they have learned in the lesson. Identify questions that you can ask students to begin the closure conversation. Identify how students will confirm transfer of the learning target(s)/ objectives to application outside the classroom. |
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Homework: |
Clearly identify any homework tasks as appropriate. Elaborate whether the homework is drill- or skill-practice-based and explain how the homework assignment supports the learning targets / objectives. Attach any copies of homework. |
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