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Lesson
Plan Template for SED 406 and 407
part 1 =
planning
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Teacher Candidate:
Emily Fisher
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Subject:
US History 1
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Grade(s):
9
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Name of Lesson:
Sectionalism in the
US
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Learning Objective(s),
including Bloom's taxonomic level: (label A, B, C, *D) *optional
After reading the section
in their history book devoted to sectionalism, students will write a
constructed response essay describing the developing sectionalism of the
United States in the 1800s and how Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, and John C.
Calhoun became spokesmen for different areas of the United States.
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Student Standards (GSE
or/GLE or Common Core-in draft for math/science- list which):
US
History Era 4: Standard 2: How the industrial revolution, increasing
immigration, the rapid expansion of slavery, and the westward movement
changed the lives of Americans and led toward regional tensions
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Teacher Standards
(professional society and/or NETS and
RIPTS-list which):
RIPTS: 2.3: Select appropriate instructional materials and
resources (including technological resources) based on their
comprehensiveness, accuracy, and usefulness for representing particular ideas
and concepts in the discipline/content areas
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Rationale: Why this lesson? How does it fit into the
curriculum and context?
Is this the
introduction, conclusion, or somewhere in the middle of the unit of
instruction?
This lesson is a necessary precursor to the American Civil
War, as it describes the mounting tensions between regions of the US, and how
differing needs of a region led to differing ideals (The South vs. the North
on import taxes, etc). This is more than likely an introduction to a new
unit, as it’s a good period transition period of history between two major
events (the War of 1812 and the Civil War).
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Materials/Resources
needed, including technology:
Text books;
pencils; lined paper
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Accommodations and
Modifications (special needs and learning styles)
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What content
resources support this knowledge base? (list at least 2)
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How confident are
you in this topic as you start this lesson?
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Lesson Plan Template
part 2 =
action
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Bell-ringer: How will
you get students seated, and ready for academic work? (without your voice)
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Anticipatory Set:
How will you introduce the material, interest the students, show relevance of
topic?
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Phase (change as
needed)/Time
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Teacher action
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Student action
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Questions/Assessments
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e.g. Intro/5 min.
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Introduce the “Do
Now”: “This Day in History”
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Write down Do Now
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“Any questions?”
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Presentation or
Open-ended/
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Introduce section of the book they will be reading and
pass out paper in order to write constructed response essay
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Start reading and taking notes
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Guided Practice or
Convergent/
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Pass out paper for final draft
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Create final draft of the essay
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Closing/
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Collect papers
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Hand in papers
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HW/Application/
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“Have a good Thanksgiving!”
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Review and
Reflection: How will you review for students who are still having trouble?
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Extension: What
will you offer to students who have mastered this?
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*Closing: How will you review the material, and
draw conclusions? (may be listed above)
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Lesson
Plan Template
pt. 3 =
reflection
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WHAT?
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What went well?
Students listened and did their work on time. Most of them
seemed to be able to handle doing work on their own, without guidance.
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What area of
weakness needs addressing?
The teacher let the book do the teaching—why didn’t he
open with sectionalism and use the book as review? Did he think he wouldn’t have enough time?
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Which objectives
were met? What is the evidence?
Students took notes and addressed the stances of Clay,
Webster, and Calhoun in their essays, making note of each region’s
differences and why.
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Which students did
not meet objectives?
Those that did not finish the essay on time
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Was time managed
appropriately?
Yes: the majority of the students had finished their
essays by the end of class.
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Did any teacher
mannerisms or actions detract from the lesson?
Only once, when he had to tell a student to quit
distracting others—naturally this led to the rest of the class looking up and
around towards the troublemaker, the exact opposite of what the teacher
wanted.
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*What were the
strengths and weaknesses of classroom management?
Called the student out in front of the whole class rather
than quietly dissuading the student from talking. Also, when the student
appeared disinterested and disengaged in the work, he didn’t try to
intervene.
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SO WHAT?
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Was the lesson
engaging?
Not really—students read silently and got to writing right
away. There wasn’t any class discussion.
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I actually learned what I would not do in the class. I don’t like the idea of using the textbook
as the teacher—I would have preferred that the teacher introduce sectionalism
himself. In addition, he stayed in one spot, by the desk, rather than moving around
the classroom to check on how the students were doing/if they needed help.
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NOW WHAT?
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How will this
experience influence your professional identity?
I want to be the type of teacher that the students will
feel comfortable asking for help from, and who can offer help. My students
should feel like I’m the one whose teaching them, and I’m the one controlling
the energy of the classroom.
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How will it
influence how you plan/teach/assess in the future?
I want to emphasize class participate and debate over
silent reading and writing, and I want to be able to know how to engage
students so they don’t feel bored, or that they’re just doing busywork.
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