Slides from a webinar presented by Heidi Hayes Jacobs from Curriculum21 about implementing the Common Core State Standards and mapping your curriculum to the standards. This webinar was held on April 18, 2013. Watch the recording here: http://www.schoolimprovement.com/resources/webinars/webinar-heidi-hayes-jacobs-common-core/
Executive Program Practical Connection Assignment Component .docxelbanglis
Executive Program Practical Connection Assignment
Component
Proficient (15 to 20 points)
Competent (8 to 14 points)
Novice (1 to 7 points)
Score
Assignment Requirements
Student completed all required portions of the assignment
Completed portions of the assignment
Did not complete the required assignment.
Writing Skills, Grammar, and APA Formatting
Assignment strongly demonstrates graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is well written, and ideas are well developed and explained. Demonstrates strong writing skills. Student paid close attention to spelling and punctuation. Sentences and paragraphs are grammatically correct.
Proper use of APA formatting. Properly and explicitly cited outside resources. Reference list matches citations.
Assignment demonstrates graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is effectively communicated, but some sections lacking clarity. Student paid some attention to spelling and punctuation, but there are errors within the writing. Needs attention to proper writing skills.
Use of APA formatting and citations of outside resources, but has a few instances in which proper citations are missing.
Assignment does not demonstrate graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is poorly written and confusing. Ideas are not communicated effectively. Student paid no attention to spelling and punctuation. Demonstrates poor writing skills.
The assignment lacks the use of APA formatting and does not provide proper citations or includes no citations.
Maintains purpose/focus
Submission is well organized and has a tight and cohesive focus that is integrated throughout the document
Submissions has an organizational structure and the focus is clear throughout.
Submission lacks focus or contains major drifts in focus
Understanding of Course Content
Student demonstrates understand of course content and knowledge.
Student demonstrates some understanding of course content and knowledge.
Student does not demonstrate understanding of course content and knowledge.
Work Environment Application
Student strongly demonstrates the practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
Student demonstrates some practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
Student does not demonstrate the practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
GCU College of Education
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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) an ...
GCU College of EducationLESSON PLAN TEMPLATESection 1 LessoMatthewTennant613
GCU College of Education
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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 measureable, 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, mus ...
This writing project is designed for adult English language learners at the high intermediate proficiency level. Students will write about someone they consider a superhero who has positively impacted their life. They can present their writing in various formats, such as a video, PowerPoint, or photo slideshow. The teacher will guide students through the writing process, focusing on storytelling, showing versus telling, and voice. Areas of language that will be addressed include sentence structure, verb tense, and punctuation. Students' work will be assessed using a rubric measuring creativity, language usage, grammar, and content.
Clil lesson plan about enzymes (e lab for clil) Giuseppe Venturi Pacinotti Ta...Giuseppe Venturi
This document outlines a lesson plan for teaching about enzymes using CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning) methods. The lesson aims to help students understand the role and classification of enzymes through activities presented in English. It involves students watching videos, doing group work, presentations, and online research about enzymes and their applications. Formative assessment includes students creating a presentation and writing article. The document provides details on the content, objectives, activities, skills developed, and strategies used to integrate language learning with the science content.
Incorporating creative arts in literacy instruction can increase sssuser47f0be
This document provides instructions for creating a lesson plan that integrates English language arts and creative arts for a clinical field experience classroom. The lesson plan should describe how creative arts will be incorporated into developmentally appropriate literacy instruction. It should include standards from both English language arts and creative arts, as well as objectives, vocabulary, and differentiated instruction, engagement, and assessments. The plan should be supported by 3-5 scholarly resources.
This photo-teaching innovative programme develops positive stories that support quality education. It uses photos to explore 'positive stories of development', inspired by Quality Education - one of the 17 global goals suggested in the World’s Largest Lesson Plan.
The document provides guidance on lesson design for Pupil Premium students. It suggests that explicitly teaching the underlying skills of a subject, beyond just factual content, can help PP students understand what they are learning. Teachers should refer back to course syllabi and assessment objectives to clarify the required skills. A case study demonstrates color-coding history skills like causation and evidence on displays and materials to draw students' attention to them. The document advises teachers to ensure they understand their course's skills and explain them clearly to students.
Slides from a webinar presented by Heidi Hayes Jacobs from Curriculum21 about implementing the Common Core State Standards and mapping your curriculum to the standards. This webinar was held on April 18, 2013. Watch the recording here: http://www.schoolimprovement.com/resources/webinars/webinar-heidi-hayes-jacobs-common-core/
Executive Program Practical Connection Assignment Component .docxelbanglis
Executive Program Practical Connection Assignment
Component
Proficient (15 to 20 points)
Competent (8 to 14 points)
Novice (1 to 7 points)
Score
Assignment Requirements
Student completed all required portions of the assignment
Completed portions of the assignment
Did not complete the required assignment.
Writing Skills, Grammar, and APA Formatting
Assignment strongly demonstrates graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is well written, and ideas are well developed and explained. Demonstrates strong writing skills. Student paid close attention to spelling and punctuation. Sentences and paragraphs are grammatically correct.
Proper use of APA formatting. Properly and explicitly cited outside resources. Reference list matches citations.
Assignment demonstrates graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is effectively communicated, but some sections lacking clarity. Student paid some attention to spelling and punctuation, but there are errors within the writing. Needs attention to proper writing skills.
Use of APA formatting and citations of outside resources, but has a few instances in which proper citations are missing.
Assignment does not demonstrate graduate-level proficiency in organization, grammar, and style.
Assignment is poorly written and confusing. Ideas are not communicated effectively. Student paid no attention to spelling and punctuation. Demonstrates poor writing skills.
The assignment lacks the use of APA formatting and does not provide proper citations or includes no citations.
Maintains purpose/focus
Submission is well organized and has a tight and cohesive focus that is integrated throughout the document
Submissions has an organizational structure and the focus is clear throughout.
Submission lacks focus or contains major drifts in focus
Understanding of Course Content
Student demonstrates understand of course content and knowledge.
Student demonstrates some understanding of course content and knowledge.
Student does not demonstrate understanding of course content and knowledge.
Work Environment Application
Student strongly demonstrates the practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
Student demonstrates some practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
Student does not demonstrate the practical application, or ability to apply, of course objectives within a work environment.
GCU College of Education
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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) an ...
GCU College of EducationLESSON PLAN TEMPLATESection 1 LessoMatthewTennant613
GCU College of Education
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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 measureable, 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, mus ...
This writing project is designed for adult English language learners at the high intermediate proficiency level. Students will write about someone they consider a superhero who has positively impacted their life. They can present their writing in various formats, such as a video, PowerPoint, or photo slideshow. The teacher will guide students through the writing process, focusing on storytelling, showing versus telling, and voice. Areas of language that will be addressed include sentence structure, verb tense, and punctuation. Students' work will be assessed using a rubric measuring creativity, language usage, grammar, and content.
Clil lesson plan about enzymes (e lab for clil) Giuseppe Venturi Pacinotti Ta...Giuseppe Venturi
This document outlines a lesson plan for teaching about enzymes using CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning) methods. The lesson aims to help students understand the role and classification of enzymes through activities presented in English. It involves students watching videos, doing group work, presentations, and online research about enzymes and their applications. Formative assessment includes students creating a presentation and writing article. The document provides details on the content, objectives, activities, skills developed, and strategies used to integrate language learning with the science content.
Incorporating creative arts in literacy instruction can increase sssuser47f0be
This document provides instructions for creating a lesson plan that integrates English language arts and creative arts for a clinical field experience classroom. The lesson plan should describe how creative arts will be incorporated into developmentally appropriate literacy instruction. It should include standards from both English language arts and creative arts, as well as objectives, vocabulary, and differentiated instruction, engagement, and assessments. The plan should be supported by 3-5 scholarly resources.
This photo-teaching innovative programme develops positive stories that support quality education. It uses photos to explore 'positive stories of development', inspired by Quality Education - one of the 17 global goals suggested in the World’s Largest Lesson Plan.
The document provides guidance on lesson design for Pupil Premium students. It suggests that explicitly teaching the underlying skills of a subject, beyond just factual content, can help PP students understand what they are learning. Teachers should refer back to course syllabi and assessment objectives to clarify the required skills. A case study demonstrates color-coding history skills like causation and evidence on displays and materials to draw students' attention to them. The document advises teachers to ensure they understand their course's skills and explain them clearly to students.
The document provides guidelines and standards for developing learning and instructional materials. At the end of reviewing the document, participants will be able to: 1) Apply standards and guidelines in preparing materials; 2) Identify writing and illustration skills needed; and 3) Develop localized materials using the standards. The document outlines technical specifications for page setup, typography, cover elements, artwork style, content development, preparation and reproduction standards. It also discusses instructional design principles and common elements that should be included in materials like modules, textbooks and teaching guides.
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATESection 1 Lesson PreparationTeacher Can.docxcroysierkathey
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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 measureable, 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 ...
This document discusses principles for designing effective instructional materials using information and communications technology (ICT). It outlines steps in the design process, including planning, analyzing learners, stating objectives, analyzing content, selecting methods, matching pedagogy with ICT, applying the integration, and evaluating results. Key principles discussed include ensuring materials are specifically designed for educational purposes and objectives, serve as tools for both teachers and students, and specify content, techniques, and teaching modes.
This document discusses strategies for enhancing literacy and numeracy skills. It defines literacy as the ability to understand meaning through reading, writing, listening, speaking and viewing. Literacy skills include traditional skills like reading and writing as well as digital skills like using technology. Various literacy teaching strategies are described like using vocabulary squares, concept maps and double entry journals. Numeracy is defined as skills involving numbers, patterns and shapes. Numeracy skills are important across subjects like dance, drama, English, economics and science. The document provides examples of how numeracy applies in these curriculum areas.
The document discusses the process of developing e-content. It begins by defining e-content and the two approaches to e-learning - self-paced and instructor-led. It then outlines the six phases of e-content development: analysis, design, development, testing, implementation, and evaluation. Each phase is described in 1-2 sentences. It also discusses instructional design models and the ADDIE model. The document provides details on developing individual e-content modules, including elements such as objectives, content, practice activities, and assessments. It outlines standards for developing various components of an e-content module such as text, audio, video, images, animation, and simulations.
GCU College of EducationLESSON PLAN TEMPLATESection 1 Lesso.docxshericehewat
This document provides a template for a lesson plan that emphasizes differentiation and meeting the needs of diverse learners. The template includes sections for lesson preparation, instructional planning, and assessment. It prompts the teacher to identify standards, objectives, resources, and how concepts will be introduced, practiced, and assessed in multiple ways. The teacher must explain how they will differentiate instruction and assessments based on factors like English proficiency, special needs, giftedness, and early completion.
1. What do you think is the major drawback of questionnaire resear.docxpaynetawnya
1. What do you think is the major drawback of questionnaire research and why?
•Your initial response should be at least 250 words
•All references are expected to be cited in APA format
2. Planning
Prompt
1.Identify a manager and share examples that illustrate how the function of planning is present in his/her job.
2.Classify the types of organizational goals and plans he/she performs to achieve the goals.
3.Share the organized steps of the approach to goal setting that the manager has used.
4.Identify at least two issues that affect the planning process.
Response Parameters
Initial post: The initial response to the discussion questions must be 250–350 words in length. Each of your initial responses must have at least one source (the textbook does not count). All sources should be cited in APA format.
Academic Language:
Lesson summary
and focus:
Classroom and
student factors:
National / State
Learning Standards:
Specific learning target(s) / objectives: Teacher notes:
I. PLANNING
Agenda: Formative assessment:
Functions:Key Vocabulary: Form:
Teacher Candidate:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
College of Education
In a few sentences, summarize this lesson, identifying the central focus based on the
content/skills you are teaching.
Describe the important classroom factors (demographics and environment) and
student factors (IEPs, 504s, ELLs, non-labeled challenged students), and the impact
of those factors on planning, teaching and assessing students to facilitate learning for
all students.
Identify the relevant grade level standard(s), including the strand, cluster, and stan-
dard(s) by number and its text.
Specify exactly what the students will be able to do after
the standards-based lesson.
Identify the (1) opening of the lesson; (2) learning and
teaching activities; and (3) closure that you can post as
an agenda for the students that includes the approxi-
mate time for each segment.
Identify the process and how you will measure the prog-
ress toward mastery of learning target(s).
Clarify where this lesson falls within a unit of study.
Clarify the purpose the language
is intended to achieve within each
subject area. Functions often consist
of the verbs found in the standards
and learning goal statements. How
will your students demonstrate their
understanding?
Describe the structures or ways of
organizing language to serve a par-
ticular function within each subject
area. What kinds of structures
will you implement so that your
students might demonstrate their
depth of understanding?
Include the content-specific terms
you need to teach and how you will
teach students that vocabulary in the
lesson.
Grouping:
II. INSTRUCTION
I do Students do Differentiation
Instructional Materials,
Equipment and
Technology:
A. Opening
Anticipatory set:
Prior knowledge
connection:
B. Learning and Teaching Activities (Teaching and Guided Practice):
List ALL m ...
GCU College of EducationLESSON PLAN TEMPLATESection 1 LessoMerrileeDelvalle969
GCU College of Education
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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 measureable, 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 previ ...
This document outlines a research study that aims to:
1) Describe students' needs to improve writing descriptive texts
2) Design an interactive contextual (ICON) module using multimedia to teach descriptive text writing
3) Develop the content of the ICON module based on a contextual teaching and learning approach
The study will use a research and development method to create the ICON module product and test its effectiveness with 7th grade students. It is hoped that the ICON module will improve students' English writing skills through an interactive and contextual learning process. The design, content, implementation, and evaluation of the ICON module will be described.
This document provides feedback on a student presentation about teaching English as an additional language at the early childhood level. The feedback praised the organization, relevant ideas, and thoughtful reflections in the presentation. A few ideas were suggested to develop further, such as explaining how a child's first language may interfere with second language development. The design of the presentation enriched its message. Excellent use was made of graphics. The presentation supported a holistic view of language learning and considered children's individual needs and characteristics to foster learning. Some minor revisions were recommended, such as providing evidence to support ideas. Overall, the feedback was positive and encouraged the student.
Section 1 Lesson PreparationTeacher Candidate Name Gra.docxjeffsrosalyn
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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 measureable, 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 m.
Section 1 Lesson PreparationTeacher Candidate Name Gra.docxrtodd280
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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 measureable, 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 m.
This document outlines the aims, goals, and objectives for an English as a Second Language (ESL) curriculum being developed at a post-graduate college in Mansehra, Pakistan. The course aims to improve students' reading comprehension, fluency, motivation, vocabulary, and independence as readers. Goals include learning reading strategies, becoming fluent readers, boosting comprehension, and enjoying reading. Objectives are for students to use strategies, develop receptive skills, excel academically, comprehend various texts, read extensively, and acquire vocabulary. The curriculum is designed based on an analysis of students' needs and the teaching situation.
UNIT 3. Learning Thru Design andTechnologymayelmejia
This document outlines the steps in designing instructional materials using educational technology. It discusses analyzing learners' characteristics, stating clear instructional objectives, analyzing content and selecting teaching methods and strategies. A key step is matching pedagogy to the appropriate educational technology. The process involves planning, applying the integration as planned, and evaluating results to improve future lessons that facilitate achieving learning objectives. Overall the document provides guidance to teachers on developing effective technology-integrated instructional materials tailored to students' needs.
The document discusses disaggregating Common Core standards into Know, Understand, Do (KUD) statements. It provides examples of breaking down a math and English standard into KUD components. Participants will practice identifying KUD statements, develop understandings, and provide feedback on each other's work through a shared Google site. The goal is to fully understand and be able to apply the standards.
This document discusses strategies for teaching narrative and expository text structures to students. It provides an overview of the KWL strategy to activate prior knowledge and guide reading comprehension of narratives. It also describes how to use story mapping to help students visualize and sequence the major events and characters in a story. For expository texts, it recommends building students' topic knowledge and understanding of text structures like description and cause/effect. Modeling retelling skills and using graphic organizers are presented as ways to help students comprehend and recall information from expository texts.
Clinical Field Experience C Integrating Instruction, K-3All.docxbartholomeocoombs
Clinical Field Experience C: Integrating Instruction, K-3
Allocate at least 5 hours in the field to support this field experience.
Educators use a multitude of strategies to incorporate content across the curriculum. They do this to ensure content mastery through various disciplines. Planning for instruction is an integral part of being effective at integrating instruction.
Teach one or more ELA, social studies, and/or art lessons provided by your mentor teacher. Carefully review the results of any formal or informal assessments you administered as part of that teaching, to evaluate the effect of your teaching on student outcomes.
Discuss with your mentor teacher his or her teaching philosophy and methods for social studies and art instruction, and on integrating content areas. Include questions for discussion relating to his or her methods for differentiating for students at different levels. Connect these differentiation methods to a specific need (due to disability, developmental delay, bilingual language development, or another specific issue). Also, in preparation of Clinical Field Experience E in Topic 6, discuss a lesson, provided by your mentor, you can teach in ELA, social studies, or the arts. Review Clinical Field Experience E in Topic 6 to become familiar with the requirements.
Using any remaining field experience hours, assist the teacher in providing instruction and support to the class.
Following your instruction and collaborative meeting, write a 250-500 word summary on your experiences and the collaborative discussion with your mentor. Discuss opportunities for improvement and successes from your teaching, including feedback provided by the mentor teacher. Compare your philosophy and experience of teaching to that of your mentor. Additionally, discuss the lesson plan, provided by your mentor that you will teach in Clinical Field Experience E.
APA format is not required, but solid academic writing is expected.
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. Refer to the
LopesWrite Technical Support articles
for assistance.
Document the location and hours you spend in the field on your Clinical Field Experience Verification Form.
Social Studies and ELA Integrated Five-Day Unit
Unit plans are developed with a different lens than that of a lesson plan. A unit plan is an overview of what, why, how, and when content is to be covered, while ensuring students with exceptionalities and students learning English as a second language are considered.
Using the “Social Studies and ELA Integrated Five-Day Unit Plan,” design a five-day unit based on your field experience class that integrates ELA and social studies standards, and incorporates students interacting with technology. Integrate at least two social studies standards, one reading standard, one writing .
Clinical Field Experience C Integrating Instruction, K-3All.docxbrownliecarmella
The document provides instructions for several clinical field experiences for an education program. It outlines requirements to spend time observing and assisting in a K-3 classroom, teach lessons, collaborate with the mentor teacher, and reflect on experiences. Students are instructed to integrate subjects like English language arts, social studies, and arts into multi-day lesson plans and revise plans based on feedback. Differentiation for English learners and students with disabilities is emphasized.
PISA is a global assessment that measures 15-year-old students' ability to apply their reading, mathematical, and scientific knowledge to real-life problems and situations. It is administered by the OECD every three years. India will participate for the second time in 2021 after its initial participation in 2009. PISA assesses students' capacity to comprehend complex texts, interpret data, and solve problems. It emphasizes skills like critical thinking instead of just testing content knowledge. Preparing Indian students for PISA involves practicing skills like data interpretation, reading comprehension, note-making, and developing open-minded and collaborative problem-solving abilities.
The document provides guidelines and standards for developing learning and instructional materials. At the end of reviewing the document, participants will be able to: 1) Apply standards and guidelines in preparing materials; 2) Identify writing and illustration skills needed; and 3) Develop localized materials using the standards. The document outlines technical specifications for page setup, typography, cover elements, artwork style, content development, preparation and reproduction standards. It also discusses instructional design principles and common elements that should be included in materials like modules, textbooks and teaching guides.
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATESection 1 Lesson PreparationTeacher Can.docxcroysierkathey
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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 measureable, 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 ...
This document discusses principles for designing effective instructional materials using information and communications technology (ICT). It outlines steps in the design process, including planning, analyzing learners, stating objectives, analyzing content, selecting methods, matching pedagogy with ICT, applying the integration, and evaluating results. Key principles discussed include ensuring materials are specifically designed for educational purposes and objectives, serve as tools for both teachers and students, and specify content, techniques, and teaching modes.
This document discusses strategies for enhancing literacy and numeracy skills. It defines literacy as the ability to understand meaning through reading, writing, listening, speaking and viewing. Literacy skills include traditional skills like reading and writing as well as digital skills like using technology. Various literacy teaching strategies are described like using vocabulary squares, concept maps and double entry journals. Numeracy is defined as skills involving numbers, patterns and shapes. Numeracy skills are important across subjects like dance, drama, English, economics and science. The document provides examples of how numeracy applies in these curriculum areas.
The document discusses the process of developing e-content. It begins by defining e-content and the two approaches to e-learning - self-paced and instructor-led. It then outlines the six phases of e-content development: analysis, design, development, testing, implementation, and evaluation. Each phase is described in 1-2 sentences. It also discusses instructional design models and the ADDIE model. The document provides details on developing individual e-content modules, including elements such as objectives, content, practice activities, and assessments. It outlines standards for developing various components of an e-content module such as text, audio, video, images, animation, and simulations.
GCU College of EducationLESSON PLAN TEMPLATESection 1 Lesso.docxshericehewat
This document provides a template for a lesson plan that emphasizes differentiation and meeting the needs of diverse learners. The template includes sections for lesson preparation, instructional planning, and assessment. It prompts the teacher to identify standards, objectives, resources, and how concepts will be introduced, practiced, and assessed in multiple ways. The teacher must explain how they will differentiate instruction and assessments based on factors like English proficiency, special needs, giftedness, and early completion.
1. What do you think is the major drawback of questionnaire resear.docxpaynetawnya
1. What do you think is the major drawback of questionnaire research and why?
•Your initial response should be at least 250 words
•All references are expected to be cited in APA format
2. Planning
Prompt
1.Identify a manager and share examples that illustrate how the function of planning is present in his/her job.
2.Classify the types of organizational goals and plans he/she performs to achieve the goals.
3.Share the organized steps of the approach to goal setting that the manager has used.
4.Identify at least two issues that affect the planning process.
Response Parameters
Initial post: The initial response to the discussion questions must be 250–350 words in length. Each of your initial responses must have at least one source (the textbook does not count). All sources should be cited in APA format.
Academic Language:
Lesson summary
and focus:
Classroom and
student factors:
National / State
Learning Standards:
Specific learning target(s) / objectives: Teacher notes:
I. PLANNING
Agenda: Formative assessment:
Functions:Key Vocabulary: Form:
Teacher Candidate:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
College of Education
In a few sentences, summarize this lesson, identifying the central focus based on the
content/skills you are teaching.
Describe the important classroom factors (demographics and environment) and
student factors (IEPs, 504s, ELLs, non-labeled challenged students), and the impact
of those factors on planning, teaching and assessing students to facilitate learning for
all students.
Identify the relevant grade level standard(s), including the strand, cluster, and stan-
dard(s) by number and its text.
Specify exactly what the students will be able to do after
the standards-based lesson.
Identify the (1) opening of the lesson; (2) learning and
teaching activities; and (3) closure that you can post as
an agenda for the students that includes the approxi-
mate time for each segment.
Identify the process and how you will measure the prog-
ress toward mastery of learning target(s).
Clarify where this lesson falls within a unit of study.
Clarify the purpose the language
is intended to achieve within each
subject area. Functions often consist
of the verbs found in the standards
and learning goal statements. How
will your students demonstrate their
understanding?
Describe the structures or ways of
organizing language to serve a par-
ticular function within each subject
area. What kinds of structures
will you implement so that your
students might demonstrate their
depth of understanding?
Include the content-specific terms
you need to teach and how you will
teach students that vocabulary in the
lesson.
Grouping:
II. INSTRUCTION
I do Students do Differentiation
Instructional Materials,
Equipment and
Technology:
A. Opening
Anticipatory set:
Prior knowledge
connection:
B. Learning and Teaching Activities (Teaching and Guided Practice):
List ALL m ...
GCU College of EducationLESSON PLAN TEMPLATESection 1 LessoMerrileeDelvalle969
GCU College of Education
LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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 measureable, 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 previ ...
This document outlines a research study that aims to:
1) Describe students' needs to improve writing descriptive texts
2) Design an interactive contextual (ICON) module using multimedia to teach descriptive text writing
3) Develop the content of the ICON module based on a contextual teaching and learning approach
The study will use a research and development method to create the ICON module product and test its effectiveness with 7th grade students. It is hoped that the ICON module will improve students' English writing skills through an interactive and contextual learning process. The design, content, implementation, and evaluation of the ICON module will be described.
This document provides feedback on a student presentation about teaching English as an additional language at the early childhood level. The feedback praised the organization, relevant ideas, and thoughtful reflections in the presentation. A few ideas were suggested to develop further, such as explaining how a child's first language may interfere with second language development. The design of the presentation enriched its message. Excellent use was made of graphics. The presentation supported a holistic view of language learning and considered children's individual needs and characteristics to foster learning. Some minor revisions were recommended, such as providing evidence to support ideas. Overall, the feedback was positive and encouraged the student.
Section 1 Lesson PreparationTeacher Candidate Name Gra.docxjeffsrosalyn
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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 measureable, 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 m.
Section 1 Lesson PreparationTeacher Candidate Name Gra.docxrtodd280
Section 1: Lesson Preparation
Teacher Candidate Name:
Grade Level:
Date:
Unit/Subject:
Instructional Plan Title:
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 measureable, 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 m.
This document outlines the aims, goals, and objectives for an English as a Second Language (ESL) curriculum being developed at a post-graduate college in Mansehra, Pakistan. The course aims to improve students' reading comprehension, fluency, motivation, vocabulary, and independence as readers. Goals include learning reading strategies, becoming fluent readers, boosting comprehension, and enjoying reading. Objectives are for students to use strategies, develop receptive skills, excel academically, comprehend various texts, read extensively, and acquire vocabulary. The curriculum is designed based on an analysis of students' needs and the teaching situation.
UNIT 3. Learning Thru Design andTechnologymayelmejia
This document outlines the steps in designing instructional materials using educational technology. It discusses analyzing learners' characteristics, stating clear instructional objectives, analyzing content and selecting teaching methods and strategies. A key step is matching pedagogy to the appropriate educational technology. The process involves planning, applying the integration as planned, and evaluating results to improve future lessons that facilitate achieving learning objectives. Overall the document provides guidance to teachers on developing effective technology-integrated instructional materials tailored to students' needs.
The document discusses disaggregating Common Core standards into Know, Understand, Do (KUD) statements. It provides examples of breaking down a math and English standard into KUD components. Participants will practice identifying KUD statements, develop understandings, and provide feedback on each other's work through a shared Google site. The goal is to fully understand and be able to apply the standards.
This document discusses strategies for teaching narrative and expository text structures to students. It provides an overview of the KWL strategy to activate prior knowledge and guide reading comprehension of narratives. It also describes how to use story mapping to help students visualize and sequence the major events and characters in a story. For expository texts, it recommends building students' topic knowledge and understanding of text structures like description and cause/effect. Modeling retelling skills and using graphic organizers are presented as ways to help students comprehend and recall information from expository texts.
Clinical Field Experience C Integrating Instruction, K-3All.docxbartholomeocoombs
Clinical Field Experience C: Integrating Instruction, K-3
Allocate at least 5 hours in the field to support this field experience.
Educators use a multitude of strategies to incorporate content across the curriculum. They do this to ensure content mastery through various disciplines. Planning for instruction is an integral part of being effective at integrating instruction.
Teach one or more ELA, social studies, and/or art lessons provided by your mentor teacher. Carefully review the results of any formal or informal assessments you administered as part of that teaching, to evaluate the effect of your teaching on student outcomes.
Discuss with your mentor teacher his or her teaching philosophy and methods for social studies and art instruction, and on integrating content areas. Include questions for discussion relating to his or her methods for differentiating for students at different levels. Connect these differentiation methods to a specific need (due to disability, developmental delay, bilingual language development, or another specific issue). Also, in preparation of Clinical Field Experience E in Topic 6, discuss a lesson, provided by your mentor, you can teach in ELA, social studies, or the arts. Review Clinical Field Experience E in Topic 6 to become familiar with the requirements.
Using any remaining field experience hours, assist the teacher in providing instruction and support to the class.
Following your instruction and collaborative meeting, write a 250-500 word summary on your experiences and the collaborative discussion with your mentor. Discuss opportunities for improvement and successes from your teaching, including feedback provided by the mentor teacher. Compare your philosophy and experience of teaching to that of your mentor. Additionally, discuss the lesson plan, provided by your mentor that you will teach in Clinical Field Experience E.
APA format is not required, but solid academic writing is expected.
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. Refer to the
LopesWrite Technical Support articles
for assistance.
Document the location and hours you spend in the field on your Clinical Field Experience Verification Form.
Social Studies and ELA Integrated Five-Day Unit
Unit plans are developed with a different lens than that of a lesson plan. A unit plan is an overview of what, why, how, and when content is to be covered, while ensuring students with exceptionalities and students learning English as a second language are considered.
Using the “Social Studies and ELA Integrated Five-Day Unit Plan,” design a five-day unit based on your field experience class that integrates ELA and social studies standards, and incorporates students interacting with technology. Integrate at least two social studies standards, one reading standard, one writing .
Clinical Field Experience C Integrating Instruction, K-3All.docxbrownliecarmella
The document provides instructions for several clinical field experiences for an education program. It outlines requirements to spend time observing and assisting in a K-3 classroom, teach lessons, collaborate with the mentor teacher, and reflect on experiences. Students are instructed to integrate subjects like English language arts, social studies, and arts into multi-day lesson plans and revise plans based on feedback. Differentiation for English learners and students with disabilities is emphasized.
PISA is a global assessment that measures 15-year-old students' ability to apply their reading, mathematical, and scientific knowledge to real-life problems and situations. It is administered by the OECD every three years. India will participate for the second time in 2021 after its initial participation in 2009. PISA assesses students' capacity to comprehend complex texts, interpret data, and solve problems. It emphasizes skills like critical thinking instead of just testing content knowledge. Preparing Indian students for PISA involves practicing skills like data interpretation, reading comprehension, note-making, and developing open-minded and collaborative problem-solving abilities.
Similar to Company Snapshot Theme for Business by Slidesgo.pptx (20)
Summative and Formative Assessments1.pptNurislamiyah7
This document discusses the differences between formative and summative assessments. Formative assessments are ongoing, informal evaluations like checklists that provide immediate feedback to improve teaching and ensure student success. Summative assessments occur at the end of a period to evaluate student learning. While different, both forms of assessment are important for accurate evaluation if aligned to student outcomes. The best method incorporates both formative, with ongoing feedback, and summative evaluations.
Gray white simple modern Thesis Defense Presentation (1).pptxNurislamiyah7
This document discusses the constructivism theory of learning. It defines constructivism as a theory that emphasizes active learning where students construct their own understanding through experiences and interactions. There are two main types: cognitive constructivism based on Piaget's work around stages of cognitive development, and social constructivism based on Vygotsky's view that social interactions influence learning. The document provides examples of constructivist teaching approaches like problem-based learning, inquiry-based learning, and collaborative learning. It also outlines benefits of constructivism like critical thinking skills and personalized learning.
Gray white simple modern Thesis Defense Presentation (1).pptxNurislamiyah7
This document discusses the constructivism theory of learning. It defines constructivism as a theory that emphasizes active learning where students construct their own understanding through experiences and interactions. There are two main types: cognitive constructivism based on Piaget which states knowledge is built from cognitive structures; and social constructivism based on Vygotsky which emphasizes collaborative learning through social and cultural interactions. The document provides examples of constructivist approaches like problem-based learning, inquiry-based learning and collaborative learning. It outlines benefits like critical thinking, collaboration skills, and personalized learning. Overall, constructivism recognizes that students actively participate in building understanding through hands-on activities and social interactions.
This document presents a research proposal that examines English teachers' perceptions of using crossword puzzle games to teach vocabulary at junior high schools in Palu, Indonesia. The study aims to determine if crossword puzzles improve students' vocabulary mastery and identify any impacts or obstacles for teachers. It will employ qualitative methods, collecting data through questionnaires and interviews with 6 English teachers from 3 schools. The literature review discusses theories of vocabulary acquisition and the advantages of using games like crossword puzzles in teaching. Data analysis will involve reducing, displaying and verifying the collected information. The researcher hopes the study can benefit teachers, students and future researchers.
This study examined the correlation between vocabulary mastery and reading comprehension of second year students at SMK Negeri 3 Palu. Data was collected from 27 students through vocabulary and reading comprehension tests. Statistical analysis found a low positive correlation (r=0.322) between students' vocabulary scores and reading scores, indicating that higher vocabulary knowledge relates to better reading comprehension, though the relationship is modest. The study concludes that while vocabulary mastery and reading comprehension are correlated for these students, other factors also influence reading ability.
RESEACH ON EFL ASSIGNMENT-Nur Islamiyah (A12223005).pptxNurislamiyah7
The document discusses research on speaking anxiety among English-major students in Ghana. It aims to identify the causes of in-class speaking anxiety and strategies to address it. The study collected qualitative data through interviews with 30 English-major students. The findings revealed that inferiority complex, fear of mistakes, lack of preparation, negative evaluation, limited vocabulary and self-criticism cause speaking anxiety. The students suggested creating a supportive classroom environment, peer assessment, more speaking activities, positive feedback, and resignation as coping strategies. The study recommends future quantitative research to generalize the outcomes.
This document is a skripsi (thesis) written by Nur Islamiyah that examines English teachers' perceptions of using crossword puzzles to teach vocabulary in junior high schools in Palu, Central Sulawesi. The study aims to identify the impact of implementing crossword puzzles and uncover teachers' perceptions. The literature review discusses key concepts like perception, the importance of vocabulary, strategies for teaching vocabulary including crossword puzzles, and the advantages and disadvantages of using crossword puzzles. The study was conducted through interviews with 5 English teachers from several schools in Palu. The findings suggest that most teachers feel crossword puzzles make the teaching process more effective by increasing student enthusiasm and vocabulary, though one teacher noted it could make the class
This document summarizes research on vocabulary deficiencies and language anxiety among English-speaking university students. It introduces the research problem, which is that a lack of vocabulary can hinder student progress and language anxiety resulting from deficiencies can negatively impact students. The research question aims to understand how vocabulary gaps contribute to language anxiety development and coping strategies. Three related studies are summarized that explore the importance of vocabulary teaching, levels and causes of public speaking anxiety among students, and the relationship between language anxiety and English speaking performance. The document provides context on the role of English proficiency in academics and aims to help develop targeted language support programs.
This document discusses different methods for assessing vocabulary, including labeling, definitions, translation, and matching. Labeling involves learners writing the word for a given picture. Definitions asks learners to write the word that corresponds to a definition. Translation assessments test vocabulary through multiple choice questions asking for the correct translation or providing a list to translate. Matching presents two columns to match a word in one column to another. These methods are commonly used to test vocabulary acquisition and knowledge.
This document outlines a research proposal that aims to analyze errors made by seventh grade students at SMP Negeri 1 Ratolindo in using personal pronouns. The research will examine the types and level of errors in subject pronouns, object pronouns, and possessive adjectives based on student test results. Data will be collected through a sentence completion test and interviews with high- and low-scoring students. Error frequency and percentages will be calculated and categorized based on Corder's error analysis theory. The researcher hopes this study can help English teachers and inform future research on personal pronoun errors.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
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Article: https://pecb.com/article
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Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
3. Basic competence analysis
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Based on Basic Competencies (Basic Competencies) this
describes the learning outcomes or specific skills that students
are expected to achieve in the context of learning narrative texts
in English. This competency focuses on comparing social
functions, text structures, and linguistic characteristics of oral
and written narrative texts, especially fairy tales. Students are
expected to demonstrate the ability to understand and analyze
elements of narrative text as well as understand their contextual
meaning and also detail observable behavior or actions that
students must be able to carry out to demonstrate their
mastery of these competencies. These indicators include tasks
such as identifying the content of the fairy tale, reading aloud
with correct pronunciation and intonation, identifying
information from the text, summarizing the story, and writing
down the meaning of the fairy tale.
4. Indicator Analysis
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In all indicators of competency achievement, there is a
combination of LOTS and HOTS. Some verbs such as
“identify” and “identify” are included in LOTS, while verbs
such as “read,” “mention,” and “complete” are included in
LOTS but also require understanding and application of
higher concepts. However, assessing the extent to which
this indicator covers LOTS and HOTS also depends on the
way the lesson is implemented and the tasks given by the
teacher. Teachers can design assignments or activities
that promote higher-level thinking and deeper
application of concepts to meet established
competencies.
6. Learning objective analysis
This objective focuses on the students' ability to identify the structure of a narrative text,
extract detailed information and moral values from fairytales, and retell the fairytales
accurately. It emphasizes comprehension, analysis, and oral communication skills.
This objective targets the students' ability to identify the content of fairytales either through
listening or reading. It highlights listening and reading comprehension skills.
This objective aims to develop the students' reading skills by focusing on proper
pronunciation, intonation, and word stress. It emphasizes accurate oral delivery of the text.
This objective emphasizes the students' ability to extract information from the text while
reading. It focuses on reading comprehension and the identification of specific details.
This objective targets the students' ability to identify the parts of the story that contain the
mentioned message accurately. It emphasizes comprehension and the identification of key
elements in the narrative text.
This objective focuses on the students' ability to complete a summary of the story using
appropriate words and expressions. It emphasizes comprehension, vocabulary usage, and
summarization skills.
7. Learning material
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9. Learning material analysis
Based on the provided Lesson Implementation Plan (RPP), the learning material can be categorized into the
following categories:
Conceptual: The conceptual aspect of the lesson plan focuses on providing an understanding of narrative
text. It includes definitions and explanations of narrative text, such as its purpose and generic structures. The
plan introduces the concept of narrative text as a story with complications or problematic events and aims
to find resolutions to solve the problems.
Procedural: The procedural aspect of the lesson plan outlines the step-by-step process of learning and
applying the knowledge of narrative text. It includes activities such as analyzing social functions, text
structures, and language features of narrative texts, as well as summarizing and retelling a narrative text in
oral and written forms. The plan emphasizes the procedural skills required to identify the structure, detailed
information, and moral values in fairy tales.
Factual: The factual aspect of the lesson plan provides specific information related to the topic of narrative
text. It includes examples of narrative texts, such as legends, folklores, folktales, fables, fairy tales, and myths.
The plan also presents a specific fairy tale story about a cat and a fox as an illustrative example. Additionally,
it mentions the factual information about the purpose and generic structures of narrative text.
Metacognitive: The metacognitive aspect of the lesson plan focuses on guiding students to control and
monitor their learning process. It encourages students to reflect on their progress, use different learning
strategies, and develop their knowledge by maintaining a learning journal. The plan promotes metacognitive
skills by encouraging students to be aware of their own learning and to actively engage in the learning
process.
10. Analyze
learning
material
The categorization of the learning material into these four
categories is based on the analysis of the content provided in the
Lesson Implementation Plan. The conceptual aspect deals with
understanding the key concepts and principles of narrative text.
The procedural aspect outlines the step-by-step procedures and
activities for learning and applying narrative text skills. The factual
aspect includes specific information and examples related to
narrative text. The metacognitive aspect promotes students'
awareness and control of their own learning process.