Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byFrank Kevin O’Connor’ Modified over 8 years ago
1
Review: Weeks 1-6 Materials design and development principles Foundation for everything we do in this course Applied to textbook lesson(s) Multiple intelligences (*learning styles/different strengths) Variety of activities and ways to present materials Describing learners Age (uniqueness of children to adults), levels, motivation, goodlanguage learner characteristics Defining learning objectives ( “ The Teaching Game ” ) Aims (learning outcomes) vs. objectives, SWBAT, action verbs
2
Evidence of a plan Shows students that the teacher has devoted time to thinkingabout the class Strongly suggests a level of professionalism and acommitment to the kind of preparation students expect
3
What a plan does for teachers Gives the lesson a framework – an overall shape Helps teachers think ahead Provides a destination they want to reach Lays out a map which shows how they are going to get there
4
A good lesson contains A blend of coherence (logical pattern/connection betweenactivities) and variety
5
What should be in a plan Identify who the students are – How many? Ages? Gender?Likes/Dislikes? Easy/Hard to manage? Identify what students want to do (e.g. grammar, games,read a passage, etc.) Identify how students and teacher are going to do it –Groupings? Sequence of activities? Time? Aids? Identify what might go wrong and how it might be dealtwith, and how the lesson fits in with other lessons before andafter it
6
Questions teachers need to ask Who exactly are the students for this activity? (i.e. age, level,cultural background, and individual characteristics) Why do you want to do the activity? What will the activity achieve (i.e. what will the learningoutcome be)? How long will it take? What might go wrong? What aids will be needed? How does the activity work (i.e. procedures)? How does the activity fit in with what comes before and after it?
7
Form of a lesson plan Should be useful for the teacher and for anyone who isobserving him or her
8
Principles for a sequence of lessons Variety and sequencing (coherent pattern of progress;connections between activities and lessons)
9
8 components of a well-written lesson Objectives and goals (SWBAT) Anticipatory set (tap into background knowledge and give objectives a context) Direct instruction (how to present lesson information to students – e.g. reading a book, playing a game, etc.) Guided practice (determine how your students will demonstrate that they have grasped the skills, concepts, and modeling youhave presented in direct instruction; circulate andfacilitate/manage)
10
8 components of a well-written lesson Closure (wrap up a lesson plan and help students organize the information into a meaningful context in their minds – e.g.summary/overview, discussion about learning, etc.) Independent practice (reinforce skills and synthesize new knowledge by completing a task on their own) Required materials and equipment Assessment and follow-up (assess final outcome of the lesson and to what extent the learning objectives were achieved)
11
Common mistakes in writing lesson plans The objective of the lesson does not specify what the studentswill actually do that can be observed The lesson assessment is disconnected from the behaviorindicated in the objective The prerequisites are not specified or are inconsistent with whatis actually required to succeed with the lesson The materials in the lesson are extraneous to the actualdescribed learning activities The instruction in which the teacher will engage is not efficientfor the level of intended student learning The student activities described in the lesson plan do notcontribute in a direct and effective way to the lesson objective
12
Ways of varying a lesson Tempo (fast-moving or slow and reflective) Organization (individually, pairs, groups, whole class) Mode and skill (speak, listen, read, write) Difficulty (non-demanding or challenging) Topic Mood (light/fun, serious, etc.) Stir > settle (enliven/excite > calm down) Active > passive (own initiative > do as told)
13
Ordering components of a lesson Put the harder tasks earlier (when students are fresher andmore energetic) Have quieter activities before lively ones (as it is difficult tocalm down a class) Think about (smooth) transitions between activities Pull the class together at the beginning (greetings,organization, and introduction to the lesson) and the end(round off lesson) End on a positive note (fun activity, summary, task that ’ s easy to succeed in, etc.)
14
Lesson plans Evidence of a plan (devotion, professionalism, commitment) Plan : Framework, think ahead, destination, map and directions Good lesson : Blend of coherence and variety In a plan : Who Ss are, want to do, going to do it, possible problems Questions teachers need to ask : Why do activity, achieve, time, etc. Sequence principles : Variety and coherent pattern of progress 8 components of a well-written lesson : Objectives > Assessment Common mistakes : Objective does not specify what Ss will do, etc. Ways of varying a lesson : Tempo, organization, topic, mood, etc. Ordering components : Harder tasks earlier, quieter before lively, etc.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.