Title: DR' V' K' CHAUHAN
1ANATOMY OF LESSON PLAN
- DR. V. K. CHAUHAN
- PRINCIPAL
- DR. B. R. SUR HOMOEOPATHIC MEDICAL COLLEGE,
HOSPITAL AND RESEARCH CENTRE, NANAK PURA, NEW
DELHI
2LESSON PLAN
- The lesson plan provides a guide for managing the
learning environment and is essential to be
effective and efficient.
3LESSON PLAN
- Lesson plans are written by teachers to help them
structure the learning for themselves and for the
students. - Research indicates that all students benefit
from, and appreciate well-structured lessons.
4All lessons are based on curriculum i.e., what
is intended that students learn.
- Curriculum (what is intended that students learn)
is usually structured in units. - The units can have themes or not, but they
include many topics that are united by a common
thread. - These units, which may involve work for days or
weeks, are subdivided into daily lesson plans.
5DAILY LESSON PLANS - PURPOSE
- Lesson plans are not written for teachers to read
to the class. - They are used to structure the lesson and to help
with the flow of the class, especially when
something has occurred to distract everyone,
including the teacher.
6DAILY LESSON PLANS THINKING PARTS
- Lesson plans are first of all a thinking process.
This thinking process basically is completed in
four parts.
7DAILY LESSON PLANS THINKING PARTS
- First, determine the curriculum that is, what
the children will learn, what they will be able
to do upon completing the activities or work of
the lesson.
8DAILY LESSON PLANS THINKING PARTS
- Second, determine what the students already know,
before beginning the lesson, that can lead into
the new curriculum of the day.
9DAILY LESSON PLANS THINKING PARTS
- Third, determine at least one way to assist the
students in learning the new curriculum.
10DAILY LESSON PLANS THINKING PARTS
- Fourth, determine at least one way to evaluate
the learning outcomes of the students.
11DAILY LESSON PLANS WRITTEN FORMATS
- There are many different formats that can be used
to write daily lesson plans. - Formats that are most useful are very simple to
follow and are well structured. - An outline format can be used very easily during
class for quick references by the teacher. - It can be followed and accessed very quickly by
the teacher in case there is a distraction or in
case the teacher loses his/her) train of thought.
12DAILY LESSON PLANS WRITTEN FORMATS
- First, write the student academic behavioral
learning objective based on the thinking parts
above (especially the first and fourth steps
that is, what the students will be able to DO
upon completing the lesson, and what student
academic knowledge will be evaluated as a result).
13DAILY LESSON PLANS WRITTEN FORMATS
Second, follow steps A, B, and C as follows.
- A What the students enter the lesson already
knowing (prerequisites) - B Core lesson (what the teacher and the students
do) - C The NEW curriculum that the students exit the
lesson knowing (objective of the lesson)
14LESSON PLANNING ROLE OF TEACHER
- Effective teacher cannot create a single extra
second of the day. - But the effective teacher certainly controls the
way time is used. - Effective teacher carefully and carefully plan
for the productive use of the instructional time.
15LESSON PLANNING ROLE OF TEACHER
- Teacher wears many hats
- Friend, counsellor, judge, mentor ..... hundreds
of roles and different roles for different
classes, students, and extra curricular duties.
- However, Each role has a different effect on the
students.
16LESSON PLANNING ROLE OF TEACHER
- One of the primary role of a teacher is designer
and implementor of instruction. - Teachers at every level prepare plans that aid in
the organization and delivery of their daily
lessons.
These plans vary widely in the style and degree
of specificity.
17LESSON PLANNING ROLE OF TEACHER
- The effective teacher also needs to develop a
plan to provide direction toward the attainment
of the selected objectives. - The more organized a teacher is, the more
effective the teaching, and thus the learning,
is.
18LESSON PLANNING ROLE OF TEACHER
- Regardless of the format, all teachers need to
make wise decisions about the strategies and
methods they will employ to help students move
systematically towards learner goals.
19LESSON PLANNING ROLE OF TEACHER
- Teachers need to be able to sequence educational
needs and goals / objectives so that students
become proficient in the skills and knowledge of
a particular discipline.
20LESSON PLANNING ROLE OF TEACHER
- Several lesson plan outlines NEED TO BE
developed as per the situational need. - Planning and classroom delivery innovations
usually come once you are in the classroom with
your own set of learners, have developed your own
instructional resources, and have experimented
with various strategies.
21LESSON PLANNING ROLE OF TEACHER
- Although fundamental lesson planning elements
tend to remain unchanged, their basic formula is
always modified to suit the individual teacher's
lesson preparation or style of presentation.
22LESSON PLANNING ROLE OF TEACHER
- Some instructors prefer to construct Elaborate
detailed and impeccably typed outlines - Others rely on the briefest of notes handwritten
on scratch pads or on the backs of discarded
envelopes.
23LESSON PLANNING PROCEDURES
- Bloom's Taxonomy has classified thinking skills
into two levels - Level 1 Skills (lower order)
- Knowledge.
- Comprehension.
- Application
- Level 2 Skills (higher order)
- Application.
- Analysis.
- Synthesis.
- Evaluation
- Just to remind the Fundamentals of lesson
planning elements in reference to Blooms
Taxonomy.
24LESSON PLANNING PROCEDURES
On earlier basic skills assessments, students had
to use only the lower order thinking skills, but
the majority of questions on the FCAT require
students to use higher order skills.
- Just to remind the Fundamentals of lesson
planning elements in reference to Blooms
Taxonomy. - In reference to natomy At lower level are facts
of anatomy and at higher level is application of
these facts for clinical aspects
25LESSON PLANNING PROCEDURES
- The chart in the next slide shows the six levels
of Bloom's Taxonomy with key words that
correspond to each of the levels. - One simple way for teachers to be sure they ask
for higher order thinking skills is to use the
Level 2 key words in their lessons and on their
assignments and tests.
26(No Transcript)
27ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF LESSON PLANNING
- Objectives
- What students will be able to do as a result of
the lesson - Procedures
- What the teacher will do to get the students
there - Assessment
- What teacher can do to see if the lesson was
taught effectively - watching students work, assigning activities,
getting feedback, etc.
28ADDITIONAL ELEMENTS OF LESSON PLANNING
- Modifications/accommodations
- For any special needs students in the class
- Materials needed for the class period and any
special equipment - Time estimates
- Procedural Sub points.
29PREPARATION OF LESSON PLAN
- Stage 1
-
- Pre-Lesson Preparation
- Goals
- Content
- Student entry level
30PREPARATION OF LESSON PLAN
- Stage 2
-
- Lesson Planning and Implementation
-
- Unit title
- Instructional goals
- Objectives
- Rationale
- Content
- Instructional procedures
- Evaluation procedures
- Materials
31PREPARATION OF LESSON PLAN
- Stage 3
-
- Post-Lesson Activities
-
- Lesson evaluation
- Revision
32 FORMAT FOR LESSON PLAN-A
33 FORMAT FOR LESSON PLAN-B
34 35EXECUTION OF LESSON PLAN
- Executional Remarks
- Even teachers who develop highly structured and
detailed plans rarely adhere to them in lock-step
fashion. -
- Such rigidity would probable hinder, rather than
help, the teaching-learning process.
36EXECUTION OF LESSON PLAN
- Executional Remarks
- The elements of lesson plan should be thought of
as guiding principles to be applied as aids, but
not blueprints, to systematic instruction. - Precise preparation must allow for flexible
delivery.
37EXECUTION OF LESSON PLAN
- Executional Remarks
- During actual classroom interaction, the
instructor needs to make adaptations and to add
artistry to each lesson plan and classroom
delivery.
38TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONLECTURE
- A traditional view of the teacher is of someone
who dispenses knowledge someone who lectures,
tells, feeds, disseminates, covers material,
teaches the subject matter more than the
students. - The students sit passively while the teacher is
on show.
39TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONLECTURE
- Desks in rows and a blackboard and podium up
front are an arrangement designed for this role
of a teacher. - However, lectures are effective for giving short
sets of instructions, background information,
guidelines, or other information that is needed
in a short time frame (e.g., before doing a class
project, lab, or group activity)
40TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONDEMONSTRATION
- Demonstrations, on the other hand, allow students
to experience more fully the information and
concepts the teacher wants to impart during the
lesson. - Students remember much better what they have both
heard and seen (or even touched, smelled, or
tasted)!
41TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONDEMONSTRATION
- In demonstrations, teacher is the center of the
action and the dispenser of knowledge. - Students can more easily see what they need to
know and more efficiently link it to prior
knowledge in their own ways.
42TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONLISTENING
- Listening is very important teachers role,
something that we don't usually think of in
connection with the lecturer role. - Teachers who listen can turn around provide very
effective support structures to guide students on
to the next level of challenge.
43TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONLISTENING
- Listening is crucial for assessment of learning
(checking comprehension), for collaboration
between teachers and students. - And for giving students a real sense of ownership
of classroom activities as well as for allowing
students to articulate and internalize the
learning processes.
44TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONEMPOWERING
- Empowering is really what teaching is all about.
- Ironically, though, many teachers act as if
empowering students means weakening
themselves--their authority as both a classroom
disciplinarian and a subject-matter authority. - But may be power is like love the more you give,
the more you get.
45TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONSPOON-FEEDING
Teaching as Spoon Feeding? ... NO What goes in
... Comes back out?
46SEATING ARRANGEMENT
- As an effective teacher and to deliver an
effective lesson, it is to be remembered that
every seating arrangement should be in accordance
with what you want the lesson to accomplish.
47TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONTRADITIONAL
CLASSROOM
- A Traditional Classroom is set up with the desks
in rows, the teacher's desk or table somewhere in
front. - This arrangement packs desks into the room
efficiently and lets student have easy access to
their seats.
48TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONTRADITIONAL
CLASSROOM
- The learning environment should be designed
according to learning objectives and desired
outcomes. - However, this arrangement is probably the best
for preventing cheating on traditional testing
days. - The role of the teacher here seems that of a cop.
49TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONCLASSROOM FOR
DISCUSSION/DEBATE
- Discussions Debates and many other interactive
classroom activities, where the whole class is
looking and listening and contributing, probably
work better if the students' seats are somehow
facing each other.
50TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONCLASSROOM FOR
DISCUSSION/DEBATE
- Teacher's desk is placed in the back of the room
to get it out of the way. - It's still within easy access to grab a stack of
hand outs, etc. - The role of the teacher here is kind of like
Speaker of the House.
51TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONHORSESHOE SHAPED
CLASSROOM
- A variation on the bicameral (two sides)
arrangement is the Horseshoe. - Both the bicameral and horseshoe arrangements
work well for handing out stuff. - The role of the teacher seems to be coordinator
and collaborator in these classrooms.
52TEACHER-STUDENT COMMUNICATIONCLASSROOM FOR GROUP
ACTIVITY
- An important seating arrangement is that for the
group activities. - Here the teacher's role is facilitator.
53LESSON PLAN OF ANATOMY
54TEACHING ANATOMY MUST CHANGE
- Medical students have been taught anatomy in the
same way since medieval times - by dissection of
human cadavers. - In medical schools around the country, however,
the emphasis has now shifted from students
dissecting to demonstrator led teaching.
55TEACHING ANATOMY MUST CHANGE
- The origins and insertions are out of flavour,
and the clinical relevance of the anatomy we
learn is in flavour. - Dissecting and "self directed learning" in this
way would probably increase the amount of
anatomical knowledge medical students possess.
56SELF DIRECTED LEARNING
- What is In self-directed learning?
- (SDL), the individual takes the initiative and
the responsibility for what occurs. - Individuals select, manage, and assess their own
learning activities, which can be pursued at any
time, in any place, through any means, at any age.
57SELF DIRECTED LEARNING
- What is In self-directed learning?
- For the individual, SDL involves initiating
personal challenge activities and developing the
personal qualities to pursue them successfully.
57
58TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS A TRADITIONAL
PRESENTATION
59TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS A LINE DIAGRAM
PRESENTATION
60TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS A MORE COLOURFUL
PRESENTATION
61TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS A MORE ELABORATE
PRESENTATION
62TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS AN EXHAUSTIVE
PRESENTATION
63TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS IN SMALL UNITS
Roots
Trunks
Divisions
Cords
Branches
Upper
A
P
Middle
A
Lateral
P
Lower
P
Posterior
A
Medial
64TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS IN SMALL UNITS
Roots
Prefixed C4
Rhomboids Levator Scapulae
Dorsal Scapular
C5
C6
C7
C8
T1
Postfixed T2
Serratus Anterior
Long Thoracic
65TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS IN SMALL UNITS
Trunks
Supraspinatus Infraspinatus
Suprascapular n.
Nerve to subclavius
Adjacent to apex of lung
66TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS IN SMALL UNITS
Usu. No nerves
Divisions
Anterior divisions flexors Posterior divisions
extensors
67TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS IN SMALL UNITS
Cords
Lateral pectoral n.
Pect major
Medial pectoral n.
Teres major subscapularis
Medial brachial cutaneous Medial antebrach.
Cutan.
Upper lower subscapular n Thoracodorsal n
Lat dorsi
68TEACHING BRACHIAL PLEXUS IN SMALL UNITS
Branches
Biceps Brachialis (lat cut n of
forearm) coracobrachialis
musculocutaneous
Deltoid, teres minor
axillary
radial
median
ulnar
69HISTORY
Literal translation of brachial plexus
interweaving of strands of the
arm Hippocrates, 400 B.C. 1st anatomical
dissections during this time period
70HISTORY
700 years before Hippocrates
The Iliad by Homer 2 passages highly suggestive
of injury to the brachial plexus
71HISTORY
- Illustration of battle between Hector and Teucer
Teucer had just taken an arrow from his quiver
and laid it upon the bow-string, but Hector
struck him just where the collar-bone divides
the neck from the chest, a very deadly place and
broke the sinew of his arm so that his wrist was
less, and the bow dropped from his hand
72SELF DIRECTED LEARNINGBRACHIAL PLEXUS (GROUP
ACTIVITY)
BRACHIAL PLEXUS / NERVES TO ARM
http//www.flickr.com/photos/ksoc/54427341
73SELF DIRECTED LEARNINGBRACHIAL PLEXUS (GROUP
ACTIVITY)
BRACHIAL PLEXUS / NERVES TO ARM
http//www.flickr.com/photos/ksoc/54427341
74SELF DIRECTED LEARNINGBRACHIAL PLEXUS (GROUP
ACTIVITY)
BRACHIAL PLEXUS / NERVES TO ARM
http//www.flickr.com/photos/ksoc/54427341
75SELF DIRECTED LEARNINGBRACHIAL PLEXUS (GROUP
ACTIVITY)
BRACHIAL PLEXUS / NERVES TO ARM
http//www.flickr.com/photos/ksoc/54427341
76SELF DIRECTED LEARNINGBRACHIAL PLEXUS (GROUP
ACTIVITY)
BRACHIAL PLEXUS / NERVES TO ARM
http//www.flickr.com/photos/ksoc/54427341
77SELF DIRECTED LEARNINGBRACHIAL PLEXUS (GROUP
ACTIVITY)
BRACHIAL PLEXUS / NERVES TO ARM
http//www.flickr.com/photos/ksoc/54427341
78SELF DIRECTED LEARNINGBRACHIAL PLEXUS (GROUP
ACTIVITY)
BRACHIAL PLEXUS / NERVES TO ARM
http//www.flickr.com/photos/ksoc/54427341
79SELF DIRECTED LEARNINGDELTID (GROUP ACTIVITY)
80SELF DIRECTED LEARNING (GROUP ACTIVITY)
Examination of individual muscle groups
2. Levator scapulae (cervical vertebrae to
scapula) elevates scapula 3. Infraspinatus
(lower scapula to humeral head) lateral
rotation of humerus 4. Teres major (scapula to
anterior humerus) medial rotation of humerus
81SELF DIRECTED LEARNING (GROUP ACTIVITY)
Examination of individual muscle groups
5.Teres minor (scapula to posterior humerus)
lateral rotation of humerus 6.Supraspinatus
(upper scapular spine to humeral head) abducts
humerus
82SELF DIRECTED LEARNING (GROUP ACTIVITY)
Examination of individual muscle groups
8. Rhomboids (thoracic vertebrae to scapula)
raise/adduct scapula 9. Latissimus dorsi (t-,
l-, s-vertebrae to humerus) extend/adduct arm
83SELF DIRECTED LEARNING (GROUP ACTIVITY)
Examination of individual muscle groups
Serratus anterior (anterior surface of medial
border of scapula to ribs) protraction and
rotation of scapula
84- Thorburn, 1903
- In such cases the shoulder is flaccid and
rotated inwards, the forearm is extended and the
hand lies prone. - Waiters tip position
85- 5 Patterns of nerve involvement
- C5-6 (Erbs palsy, 50)
- C5-7 (Erbs-plus palsy, 35, classic waiters tip
position axillary, musculocutaneous,
suprascapular) - C5-T1 with some finger flexion sparing
- C5-T1 with flail arm and Horners
- C8-T1 and Horners (Klumpkes, v. rare)
86- 1st published photo of bilateral neuralgic
amyotrophy, 1896 - Left scapular winging and right lateral deltoid
flattening - Nerves involved Left long thoracic and right
axillary nerve
87Burner Syndrome
- Forceful separation of the shoulder and head
- If associated with pain and paresthesias, the
term stinger or burner is applied - Males, contact sports
- Classically C6 distribution
- Permanent neurologic dysfunction is rare
88Rucksack palsy (cadet palsy, pack palsy)
- Classic painless weakness associated with
wearing a backpack - Sensory involvement
- Risk factors pack weight, duration worn, and
device characteristics - Most are demyelinating conduction block
- Conservative treatment
89- What's that ancient proverb?
- Give people some fish and they eat for the day,
- But teach people to fish and they eat for life.
- What's your metaphor for teaching?
90THANK YOU