2. Lesson plan
• A lesson plan is a teacher's detailed description of the course of
instruction or 'learning trajectory' for a lesson.A daily lesson
plan is developed by a teacher to guide class learning. Details
may vary depending on the preference of the teacher, subject
being covered, and the needs of the students.
3.
4. Good lesson plan based on four things
•Interest and abilities of student
•Your own interest and strength.
•Your beliefs about learning and teaching.
•It’s depend on you when to change plan
5. Anticipatory set of lesson planning
• A brief portion of a lesson given at the very beginning to get students'
attention, activate prior knowledge, and prepare them for the day's
learning.Also known as advance organizer , or set induction.
6. Purpose of lesson plan
•A lesson plan is a step-by-step guide that provides a
structure for an essential learning. Before planning a
lesson, it is essential to classify the learning outcomes
for the class. It is important because it helps the teacher
in maintaining a standard teaching pattern and does not
let the class deviate from the topic.
7. Objectives of lesson plan
In the objectives section of your lesson plan, write precise
and delineated goals for what you want your students to
be able to accomplish after the lesson is completed. Here
is an example: Let's say that you are writing a lesson plan
on nutrition. For this unit plan, your objective for the
lesson is for students to name a few food groups, identify
the food groups, and learn about the food.
8. Objectives should also follow the smart rule
• Specific
• Measureable
• Attainable
• Result oriented
• Time bound
9. Effective lesson planning
• An effective lesson gets students thinking and allows them to interact and
ask questions, tap into their background knowledge, and build new skills. ...
Effective lesson planning requires the teacher to determine three essential
components: the objective, the body, and a reflection.
10. Is lesson plan still important
• Lesson plan is important throughout the service of teacher.
• Lesson plan is important for newly trained teacher who could be faced with
variety of unpredictable situations.
• Teachers who want to reduce reliance on textbooks.
12. Importance
• The lesson planning process allows teachers to evaluate their own
knowledge with regards to the content to be taught.
• If a teacher has to teach, for example, a complex grammatical structure and
is not sure of the rules, the teacher would become aware of this during
lesson planning .
• A teacher with a plan, then, is a more confident teacher. Many teachers
keep files of previous lessons they have taught, which they then draw on to
facilitate planning for their current classes. In other words, lesson planning
now can save time later.
13. Why is lesson plan important
• Lesson plan comfortably aligns classroom instruction with curriculum goals
and objectives.
• Lesson plan shapes how and what students.This help influence positive
attitude of students toward learning.
• Lesson plan serve as checklist that guides teacher to be systematic in the
delivery of their lesson.
• Lesson plan serves as a historical document of what the teacher did in the
class room.
• Teachers need to make wise decisions about the method and strategies.
14.
15. What happen when a teacher has no lesson
plan
• There is over reliance on textbooks.
• Lesson delivery is not always smooth.
• There is no smooth transition when another teacher takes over class.
• Course materials are underutilized.
16. Do,s and dont’s in lesson planning
• Do
• Keep yourself organized
• Did everyone get that?
• Keep an eye on the clock
• Plan ahead
• Small steps not leaps and bounds
• Don't
• 30 minutes lecture
• What was I talking about?
• Difficult content
17. Conclusion
• Closure is the step where you wrap up a lesson plan and help students
organize the information in a meaningful context in their minds.This helps
students better understand what they have learned and provides a way in
which they can apply it to the world around them.