An ?effective educator plans, presents, and assesses engaging, ?standards-based content to students with diverse needs. In order to ?deliver high quality instruction, a teacher must monitor
An effective educator plans, presents, and assesses engaging, standards-based content to students with diverse needs. In order to deliver high quality instruction, a teacher must monitor student progress and provide feedback to guide students towards mastery of a concept. Educators must also incorporate a variety of technology to achieve student goals and to measure outcomes.
Choosing one of the lessons from the 3-Day Unit Plan developed in Topic 4, create a complete lesson plan using the “COE Lesson Plan Template.” Use the “Class Profile” to inform differentiation. Include technologies to support assessment, planning, and delivery for students with disabilities and all students in the inclusive classroom.
Below the lesson plan, write a 250-500 word rationale explaining how you would continuously monitor student progress, provide meaningful feedback, and work collaboratively with other teachers to establish learning goals for improving students’ quality of work and assisting them with analyzing their own assessment results.
Support your assignment with a minimum of three scholarly resources.
While APA format is not required for the body of this assignment, solid academic writing is expected, and in-text citations and references should be presented using APA documentation guidelines, which can be found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center.
This assignment uses a rubric. Review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the expectations for successful completion.
You are required to submit this assignment to LopesWrite. A link to the LopesWrite Technical Support Articles is located in Class Resources if you need assistance.
Benchmark Information
This benchmark assignment assesses the following programmatic competencies and professional standards:
MEd in Elementary Education and Special Education
4.7: Continuously monitor student progress to provide effective descriptive feedback, and collaboratively establish learning goals, assisting students in identifying quality work and analyzing their own assessment results. [CEC 4.4; ICSI.2.S8, ICSI.2.S9, ICSI.4.S7, ICSI.7.S4, IGC.2.S4; InTASC 6(d), 6(m), 6(n), 6(q), 6(s), 7(f);); GCU Mission Critical 1, 2]
5.2: Use technologies to support instructional assessment, planning, and delivery for individuals with exceptionalities. [CEC 5.2, ICSI.5.K2, ICSI.5.K3, ICSI.5.S7, ICSI.5.S14, IGC.5.K1, IGC.5.K3, IGC.5.S1, IGC.5.S7, IGC.5.S23, IGC.5.S24, IGC.5.S25, IGC.5.S29; InTASC 6(g), 6(i), 6(r), 7(b), 7(d), 7(j), 7(q), 8(a), 8(b), 8(j), 8(k), 8(p); ISTE-E 5a, 5b, 5c, 7b; MC1, MC2, MC4]
Topic 5 Benchmark Cross-Curricular Lesson Plan Rubric (3 Pages)
,
ESD 585 Check Sheet
Topic 5 – Benchmark Cross-Curricular Lesson Plan
Completing this check sheet should help improve your grade.
Step Action Done?
1 Use the template attached to Announcement Topic 5
Did you complete all required entries in the Lesson Plan?
2 Each time you pause while writing this and when you have
finished, click on the Word Ribbon’s Review tab, click on Editor,
go through the document. Use your judgment in accepting
suggested corrections.
3 The assignment needs a 250-500-word rationale that is worth up to
60 points. Select the rationale text, click on the Review tab, click
on word count. If it is not within the required word range, then edit
it to bring it within that range. The assignment must align with the
Rubric. Open the rubric and ask yourself if you would give your
intended submission target grade in each component. If not, then
edit and improve it.
A frequent error is confusing students, student’s, and students’
This table should reduce that confusion
If these fit > they or them their or theirs his, her, or hers
Use > students students’ student’s
4 See the Topic 2 Check Sheet, item 4, for guidance on required text
format, including APA 7 compliance for citations and References
entries. Checking and correcting these issues can make the
difference between a lower grade and a target grade.
6 Ask a friend to critically proofread your draft. From personal
experience, I know every writer can easily miss their own errors. A
friend catches them much better.
7 Make all required corrections.
,
2
Topic 5 – Benchmark – Cross-Curricular Lesson Plan
Your Name
Grand Canyon University: ESD-585
Instructor: Dr. Clayton Alford
August 2, 2023
Recommendations · Use Word 365. Avoid Google Docs and other incompatible programs. · Select “Your Name” above and type your name. · This entire document requires only one spacebar keystroke between words, sentences, and after a punctuation mark. · Starting on Page 2, complete the cross-curricular lesson plan. · After the lesson plan, on the page headed Rationale, write a 250-500-word rationale. · Each paragraph needs line spacing double and 0.5” first line indent. · After the rationale, follow the prompts for your References entries, which must comply with APA 7 rules – see APA 7 style guide (attached to Announcement #1). · Before you submit this to Lopeswrite, click on Review tab, select the text of your Rationale, click on word count. If the word count is below 250 or above 500 words edit it to bring it within that required range; click on Editor, go through each concept with possible errors and correct where necessary |
Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name: |
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Grade Level:
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Date: |
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Unit/Subject: |
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Instructional Plan Title: |
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Lesson Summary and Focus: |
In 2-3 sentences, summarize the lesson, identifying the central focus based on the content and skills you are teaching. |
Classroom and Student Factors/Grouping: |
Describe the important classroom factors (demographics and environment) and student factors (IEPs, 504s, ELLs, students with behavior concerns, gifted learners), and the effect of those factors on planning, teaching, and assessing students to facilitate learning for all students. This should be limited to 2-3 sentences and the information should inform the differentiation components of the lesson. |
National/State Learning Standards: |
Review national and state standards to become familiar with the standards you will be working with in the classroom environment. Your goal in this section is to identify the standards that are the focus of the lesson being presented. Standards must address learning initiatives from one or more content areas, as well as align with the lesson’s learning targets/objectives and assessments. Include the standards with the performance indicators and the standard language in its entirety. |
Specific Learning Target(s)/Objectives: |
Learning objectives are designed to identify what the teacher intends to measure in learning. These must be aligned with the standards. When creating objectives, a learner must consider the following: · Who is the audience · What action verb will be measured during instruction/assessment · What tools or conditions are being used to meet the learning What is being assessed in the lesson must align directly to the objective created. This should not be a summary of the lesson, but a measurable statement demonstrating what the student will be assessed on at the completion of the lesson. For instance, “understand” is not measurable, but “describe” and “identify” are. For example: Given an unlabeled map outlining the 50 states, students will accurately label all state names. |
Academic Language |
In this section, include a bulleted list of the general academic vocabulary and content-specific vocabulary you need to teach. In a few sentences, describe how you will teach students those terms in the lesson. |
Resources, Materials, Equipment, and Technology: |
List all resources, materials, equipment, and technology you and the students will use during the lesson. As required by your instructor, add or attach copies of ALL printed and online materials at the end of this template. Include links needed for online resources. |
Section 2: Instructional Planning
Anticipatory Set Your goal in this section is to open the lesson by activating students’ prior knowledge, linking previous learning with what they will be learning in this lesson and gaining student interest for the lesson. Consider various learning preferences (movement, music, visuals) as a tool to engage interest and motivate learners for the lesson. In a bulleted list, describe the materials and activities you will use to open the lesson. Bold any materials you will need to prepare for the lesson. For example: · I will use a visual of the planet Earth and ask students to describe what Earth looks like. · I will record their ideas on the whiteboard and ask more questions about the amount of water they think is on planet Earth and where the water is located. |
Time Needed |
Multiple Means of Representation Learners perceive and comprehend information differently. Your goal in this section is to explain how you would present content in various ways to meet the needs of different learners. For example, you may present the material using guided notes, graphic organizers, video or other visual media, annotation tools, anchor charts, hands-on manipulatives, adaptive technologies, etc. In a bulleted list, describe the materials you will use to differentiate instruction and how you will use these materials throughout the lesson to support learning. Bold any materials you will need to prepare for the lesson. For example: · I will use a Venn diagram graphic organizer to teach students how to compare and contrast the two main characters in the read-aloud story. · I will model one example on the white board before allowing students to work on the Venn diagram graphic organizer with their elbow partner. Explain how you will differentiate materials for each of the following groups: · English language learners (ELL): · Students with special needs: · Students with gifted abilities: · Early finishers (those students who finish early and may need additional resources/support): |
Time Needed |
Multiple Means of Engagement Your goal for this section is to outline how you will engage students in interacting with the content and academic language. How will students explore, practice, and apply the content? For example, you may engage students through collaborative group work, Kagan cooperative learning structures, hands-on activities, structured discussions, reading and writing activities, experiments, problem solving, etc. In a bulleted list, describe the activities you will engage students in to allow them to explore, practice, and apply the content and academic language. Bold any activities you will use in the lesson. Also, include formative questioning strategies and higher order thinking questions you might pose. For example: · I will use a matching card activity where students will need to find a partner with a card that has an answer that matches their number sentence. · I will model one example of solving a number sentence on the white board before having students search for the matching card. · I will then have the partner who has the number sentence explain to their partner how they got the answer. Explain how you will differentiate activities for each of the following groups: · English language learners (ELL): · Students with special needs: · Students with gifted abilities: · Early finishers (those students who finish early and may need additional resources/support): |
Time Needed |
Multiple Means of Expression Learners differ in the ways they navigate a learning environment and express what they know. Your goal in this section is to explain the various ways in which your students will demonstrate what they have learned. Explain how you will provide alternative means for response, selection, and composition to accommodate all learners. Will you tier any of these products? Will you offer students choices to demonstrate mastery? This section is essentially differentiated assessment. In a bulleted list, explain the options you will provide for your students to express their knowledge about the topic. For example, students may demonstrate their knowledge in more summative ways through a short answer or multiple-choice test, multimedia presentation, video, speech to text, website, written sentence, paragraph, essay, poster, portfolio, hands-on project, experiment, reflection, blog post, or skit. Bold the names of any summative assessments. Students may also demonstrate their knowledge in ways that are more formative. For example, students may take part in thumbs up-thumbs middle-thumbs down, a short essay or drawing, an entrance slip or exit ticket, mini-whiteboard answers, fist to five, electronic quiz games, running records, four corners, or hand raising. Underline the names of any formative assessments. For example: Students will complete a one-paragraph reflection on the in-class simulation they experienced. They will be expected to write the reflection using complete sentences, proper capitalization and punctuation, and utilize an example from the simulation to demonstrate their understanding. Students will also take part in formative assessments throughout the lesson, such as thumbs up-thumbs middle-thumbs down and pair-share discussions, where you will determine if you need to re-teach or re-direct learning. Explain how you will differentiate assessments for each of the following groups: · English language learners (ELL): · Students with special needs: · Students with gifted abilities: · Early finishers (those students who finish early and may need additional resources/support): |
Time Needed |
Extension Activity and/or Homework Identify and describe any extension activities or homework tasks as appropriate. Explain how the extension activity or homework assignment supports the learning targets/objectives. As required by your instructor, attach any copies of homework at the end of this template. |
Time Needed |
Rationale
(Select Start Here, write a 250-500-word Rationale)
Start Here
References
(At least three References entries required)
Each entry must appear in a correctly formatted citation on an earlier page.
Select this line and type or paste your first references entry here.
Select this line and type or paste your second references entry here.
Select this line and type or paste your third references entry here.
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