Seeking feedback from peers is something quality educators do consistently. Being open to constructive feedback will ensure teachers are constantly improving as instruct
Seeking feedback from peers is something quality educators do consistently. Being open to constructive feedback will ensure teachers are constantly improving as instructors and professionals.
Allocate at least 3 hours in the field to support this field experience.
Meet with your mentor teacher to review the lesson plan you created in Topic 4. In your review, discuss the following:
- Does the lesson support student development across content areas?
- Is the lesson developmentally appropriate for the students in the class?
- Does the lesson meet the diverse needs of the students in the class?
Write a 250 word reflection summarizing your discussion with your mentor teacher. What changes will you make to the lesson based on your mentor teacher’s feedback? How will these changes meet the diverse needs of the students in your field experience class? How will you apply what you have learned through this experience in your future professional practice?
GCU College of Education
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name: |
|
Grade Level:
|
2nd Grade |
Date: |
March 10, 2024 |
Unit/Subject: |
Literacy and Science |
Instructional Plan Title: |
Exploring Plant Life Cycle |
Lesson Summary and Focus: |
This lesson focuses on teaching students about the life cycle of plants, integrating literacy by reading a relevant story and discussing key vocabulary. Students will practice reading comprehension and fluency while learning about basic plant biology. |
Classroom and Student Factors/Grouping: |
The classroom includes diverse learners, including ELL students and a few students with IEPs focusing on reading comprehension. Grouping will be mixed ability, allowing peer support and scaffolding. Visual aids and sentence frames will be used to support understanding and expression for all students. |
National/State Learning Standards: |
· CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RI.2.1 – Ask and answer such questions as who, what, where, when, why, and how to demonstrate understanding of key details in a text. · NGSS 2-LS2-1 – Plan and conduct an investigation to determine if plants need sunlight and water to grow. |
Specific Learning Target(s)/Objectives: |
· After reading a story about plant life cycles, students will be able to identify and describe the four main stages of the plant life cycle: germination, growth, reproduction, and seed spreading. · Students will use specific vocabulary related to plant life cycles in a group discussion to demonstrate their understanding of the text and the science concept. |
Academic Language |
· General Vocabulary: cycle, growth, stage, change · Content-Specific Vocabulary: germination, photosynthesis, reproduction, pollination · Teaching Strategy: Introduce vocabulary with real-life images and examples, use vocabulary in sentences, and apply terms in the context of the story and the science concept. |
Resources, Materials, Equipment, and Technology: |
· Book: "The Tiny Seed" by Eric Carle or a similar story about plant life cycles. · Chart paper to create a class anchor chart of the plant life cycle. · Individual whiteboards and markers for students to draw the plant life cycle. · Access to online videos or interactive games about plant life cycles (e.g., BrainPOP Jr. on Plant Life Cycles). · Worksheets for students to label or sequence the stages of a plant life cycle. |
Section 2: Instructional Planning
Anticipatory Set · I will show a short video clip about plant growth from seed to flower to grab the students' attention and activate prior knowledge. · I will use a KWL chart (Know, Want to know, Learned) to record students' prior knowledge and questions about plant life cycles. This will also help to gauge their interest and curiosity. · I will introduce a real plant and have students make observations, discussing what they know about how plants grow. |
Time Needed 10 minutes |
Multiple Means of Representation · I will use guided notes that accompany a read-aloud of the story to help students follow along and identify key information. · Visual aids, such as diagrams of the plant life cycle, will be displayed and referred to throughout the lesson. · I will provide a hands-on activity where students can arrange picture cards in the correct sequence to show the stages of plant growth. Differentiation: · ELL: Provide vocabulary cards with visuals and definitions in simple language. Use sentence frames to support discussion participation. · Special needs: Offer guided notes with more structure and fewer words per page, use manipulatives for the sequencing activity. · Gifted abilities: Provide additional resources for deeper exploration, such as books or articles on unique plant species. · Early finishers: Have additional related activities ready, such as drawing their own plant life cycle or researching a specific plant. |
Time Needed 20 minutes |
Multiple Means of Engagement · Role-playing activity: The students will be taking turns to enact the stages of plant's life cycle. · Group discussion: They will talk in small groups about what they got from the story and the video and use academic vocabulary. · Interactive whiteboard game: Students will drag and drop from the plant life cycle onto the class whiteboard in the correct order. Differentiation: · ELL: Use visual cues and have them paired up in peer groups for role play activity. · Special needs: Give precise, step-by-step directions and a peer partner for the interactive games. · Gifted abilities: Motivate these student groups to organize their own discussions or lead certain aspects of plant biology. · Early finishers: Encourage them to help their friends or look for other sources that are related to the lesson topic. |
Time Needed 15 minutes |
Multiple Means of Expression · Students will develop a storyboard that demonstrates the steps in the plant life cycle, writing in sentences to describe each step. · Students will do a formative assessment such as a pair-share discussion to tell the program coordinator their level of understanding. Differentiation: · ELL: Student to use the combination of illustrations and words on their storyboards, provide sentence starters. · Special needs: Provide a storyboard template with drawn images to be labeled or sequenced by the students. · Gifted abilities: Request these students to add more details or processes to their storyboards, for instance, photosynthesis and pollination. · Early finishers: They could write a poem or short story on what a plant passes through during its life cycle or make a highly detailed story board. |
Time Needed 15 minutes |
Extension Activity and/or Homework · Students will take home a worksheet where they can draw and label the plant life cycle, reinforcing the lesson's objectives. · As an extension, students could be asked to observe a plant at home or in the schoolyard, record their observations, and compare them to the plant life cycle stages they learned in class. |
Time Needed 10 minutes for explanation, variable for completion |
Reflection:
Fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension are building blocks of reading skills. Fluency refers to reading speed, accuracy, and the right expression. It, thus, becomes a link between the knowledge of words and their understanding; fluent readers can devote their attention more to the grasping of the meaning than to decode each word. Knowledge of vocabulary is important as it directly affects any comprehension and fluency (Mancilla-Martinez, 2020). A robust vocabulary provides students with the tools to understand the text on a deeper level and to interact more fully with it. This in turn leads to improved understanding and enjoyment of reading.
Comprehension of reading is the capacity to fully understand, dissect, and interpret what has been read. Language plays a big role as a student's level of fluency and vocabulary is a factor as is their background knowledge, inference skills and ability to connect to text at a higher level (Mancilla-Martinez, 2020).
Cross-curricular integration of concept areas such as science or social studies into literacy learning stimulates the development of these reading skills. Domain-specific terms they meet in texts related to other subjects not only broaden their vocabulary but also improve their comprehension. Such an approach helps students to both understand the terms and concepts they are studying and to remember them better.
Also, the students need to use and develop comprehension strategies such as summarizing, questioning, and making conclusions within varied and real contexts (Mancilla-Martinez, 2020). By so doing, the students’ understanding of the topic is also enhanced besides their reading skills which are enhanced through a more integrated and meaningful way.
Through exposure to different texts and prospects, students may develop motivation and purpose of reading beyond the literacy classroom, which are both indispensable in building a learner and a lifelong reader.
References
Mancilla-Martinez, J. (2020). Understanding and supporting literacy development among English learners: A deep dive into the role of language comprehension. AERA Open, 6(1), 2332858420912198.
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