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EFFECTIVE LESSON PLANNING

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An activity. A discussion starter. BE CREATIVE. PROCEDURES AND PRESENTATION ... LEARNING ACTIVITIES. Graphic organizers. Creative play. Peer presenting. Performances ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EFFECTIVE LESSON PLANNING


1
EFFECTIVE LESSONPLANNING
  • Presented by Vicki Duff
  • Mentor Training Coordinator
  • Department of Education
  • 609-292-0189
  • victoria.duff_at_doe.state.nj.us

2
GOALS
  • To summarize NJ standards-based reform efforts
  • To describe the value of effective planning
  • To discuss and utilize various components of
    effective lesson plans
  • To provide templates for lesson plans
  • To give guidance for substitute plans

3
A teacher who is attempting to teach without
inspiring the pupil with a desire to learn is
hammering on a cold iron. Horace Mann
4
INTRODUCTIONS
  • Name
  • School and position
  • What are the qualities of effective teaching?
  • (What must a teacher know and be able to do?)
  • BRAINSTORM A LIST

5
NEW JERSEY AND NCLB
  • Professional Development Standards
  • Core Curriculum Content Standards
  • The High Quality Teacher and Teaching Standards
  • Mentoring
  • State Assessments
  • Parent Involvement
  • Safe Schools
  • Annual Yearly Progress

6
PROFESSIONAL STANDARDSTHE MODEL FOR GOOD TEACHING
  • Provide direction for effective teaching
  • Identifies the knowledge, skills and dispositions
    of teaching
  • Parallel INTASC and National Board standards
  • Used to
  • Drive all pre-service programs in New Jersey
  • Guide the mentoring process
  • Influence professional development

7
EFFECTIVE TEACHERS
  • Know the content
  • Understand the development of the student
  • Value the diversity of the students within the
    class
  • Plan strategic lessons using research-based
    practices
  • Use multiple assessments to evaluate progress
  • Create a suitable learning environment
  • Adapt and modify instruction
  • Use effective communication
  • Collaborate with all members of the learning
    community
  • Engage in sustained professional growth
    experiences

8
A VISION OF TEACHING
  • Connect the dots in the puzzle using only four
    straight lines without lifting your pen/pencil
    off of the paper.

How does this relate to our teaching?
9
INSTRUCTIONAL PLANNING AND STRATEGIES
  • Plans are developed to provide students with
    meaningful learning experiences
  • Plans connect to related learning opportunities
  • Teaching is based instructional strategies that
    focus on best practice and research
  • Teaching is supported by strategies that foster
    interest and progress

10
THE DISTRICT POLICY
  • Plans are a legal document
  • Usually required weekly to the supervisor
  • Plan books (district, purchased, self-made
    notebooks)
  • Substitute plans
  • Must include
  • CCCS
  • Objectives
  • Needed materials
  • Teachers editions pages, student pages
  • Short description activities

11
GOOD PLANNING
  • Keeps the teacher and students on track
  • Achieves the objectives
  • Helps teachers to avoid unpleasant surprises
  • Provides the roadmap and visuals in a logical
    sequence
  • Provides direction to a substitute
  • Encourages reflection, refinement, and
    improvement
  • Enhances student achievement

12
POOR PLANNING
  • Frustration for the teacher and the student
  • Aimless wandering
  • Unmet objectives
  • No connections to prior learnings
  • Disorganization
  • Lack of needed materials
  • A waste of time
  • Poor management

13
A GOOD LESSON INCLUDES
  • Objectives
  • Pre-assessment
  • List of materials
  • Warm-up and introduction
  • Presentation
  • Practice
  • Evaluation
  • Closure
  • Application

14
LETS BEGIN
  • The format of a lesson should..
  • Go one step at a time
  • Have a picture for every step
  • Have a minimal reliance on words

An effective lesson plan is a set of plans for
building something it constructs the learning.
15
The greater the structure of a lesson and the
more precise the directions on what is to be
accomplished, the higher the achievement
rate. Harry Wong, The First Days of Teaching
16
PRE-ASSESSMENT
  • What are the characteristics of the learners in
    the class?
  • What do the students already know and understand?
  • How do my students learn best?
  • What modifications in instruction might I need to
    make?

17
OBJECTIVES
  • A description of what the student will be able to
    do at the end of the lesson
  • Provides alignment with district and state goals
    (Uses CCCS)
  • Use behavioral verbs to describe the expected
    outcomes (ACTION)
  • No-nos appreciate, enjoy, understand, love, etc.

18
MATERIALS
  • Plan! Prepare! Have on hand!
  • Murphys Law
  • Envision your needs.
  • List all resources.
  • Have enough manipulatives (when needed) for
    groups or individuals.

19
WARM-UP AND INTRODUCTION
  • Grab the attention of the students
  • PROVIDES THE INTEREST/MOTIVATION factor
  • Set the tone for the lesson connected to the
    objective
  • A question
  • A story
  • A saying
  • An activity
  • A discussion starter
  • BE CREATIVE

20
PROCEDURES AND PRESENTATION
  • Sets up a step-by-step plan
  • Provides a quick review of previous learning
  • Provides specific activities to assist students
    in developing the new knowledge
  • Provides modeling of a new skill
  • A picture is worth a thousand words.
  • I hear, I see..I do!

21
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
  • Graphic organizers
  • Creative play
  • Peer presenting
  • Performances
  • Role playing
  • Debates
  • Game making
  • Projects
  • Cooperative groups
  • Inquiry learning
  • Direct instruction
  • Differentiation
  • Direct Instruction

22
PRACTICEAPPLYING WHAT IS LEARNED
  • Provide multiple learning activities
  • Guided practice (teacher controlled)
  • Use a variety of questioning strategies to
    determine the level of understanding
  • Journaling, conferencing
  • Independent practice
  • Practice may be differentiated
  • BUILD ON SUCCESS

23
CLOSURE
  • Lesson Wrap-up Leave students with an imprint of
    what the lesson covered.
  • Students summarize the major concepts
  • Teacher recaps the main points
  • Teacher sets the stage for the next phase of
    learning

24
EVALUATION
  • Assess the learning
  • Teacher made test
  • In-class or homework assignment
  • Project to apply the learning in real-life
    situation
  • Recitations and summaries
  • Performance assessments
  • Use of rubrics
  • Portfolios
  • Journals
  • Informal assessment

25
REFLECTION
  • What went well in the lesson?
  • What problems did I experience?
  • Are there things I could have done differently?
  • How can I build on this lesson to make future
    lessons successful?

26
THE SUBSTITUTENOW WHAT?
  • The Key to substitute success DETAILED LESSON
    PLANS
  • Discipline routines
  • Children with special needs
  • Fire drill and emergency procedures
  • Helpful students, helpful colleagues (phone s)
  • Classroom schedule
  • Names of administrators
  • Expectations for the work
  • Packet of extra activities

27
A teacher is one who brings us tools and enables
us to use them. Jean Toomer
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