The document provides guidance on developing an effective lesson plan. It instructs the reader to identify the group of students they will be teaching. It then discusses key elements of an effective lesson such as learning objectives, outcomes, hook, main content, and plenary. The document emphasizes varying activities, differentiation, challenge, and improvisation. It provides examples of how to structure different parts of the lesson and engage students. The overall goal is to help the reader design a lesson to meet the specific needs of their group of learners.
2 g and input situation meeting & workshop november 22nd 2016Mr Bounab Samir
Salam,
2G & The input Situation
( Meeting and workshop November 22nd 2016)
The meeting points:
1) the intial problem solving concept
2) The 4 learning Situations
3) The input situation ( 2nd learning situation)
4) The teaching frame works ( PPU - PDP - PIASP )
5) How to teach PPU?
6) How to teach PD read
7) How ot teach PDP listening
8)How to teach grammar?
9 How to applly PIASP ( to teach grammar and pronunciation items)
10 ) How to deal with TD session?
Special thanks to my audience for thei great collaboration and coordination , they were amazing as usual with their great contribution and workshops , specially this meeting where all showed great mastery how to deal with each framework whic enable them plan a leanrning sequence without facing great problems . Thank you all
By : Mr Samir Bounab ( teacher trainer at MONE)
The power point links:
By : Mr Samir Bounab
This presentation is part of a series of open educational resources aimed at researchers and educators teaching research skills and teaching innovative practices. The resource and accompanying speaker's notes are available to download through a creative commons license from the African Universities’ Research Approaches programme (AURA) page on IDS OpenDocs: https://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/handle/123456789/8992
The educational curriculum for strengthening research practice was developed as part of the African Universities’ Research Approaches programme (AURA). This programme sought to strengthen research and teaching practices in East Africa through a blended learning approach mixing online and face to face learning interventions. Further information is available on the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) website: http://www.ids.ac.uk/project/african-universities-research-approaches-aura-capacity-development-programme
Author: Duvigneau, S (institute of Development Studies)
Effective Teaching & Learning Process in the ClassroomAjay Kumar
Classroom teaching is always the most important as well challenging part of the education system. We need to cater all kind of learners and need to finish the syllabus in the best way. I just tried to add some points based on my experience.
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2 g and input situation meeting & workshop november 22nd 2016Mr Bounab Samir
Salam,
2G & The input Situation
( Meeting and workshop November 22nd 2016)
The meeting points:
1) the intial problem solving concept
2) The 4 learning Situations
3) The input situation ( 2nd learning situation)
4) The teaching frame works ( PPU - PDP - PIASP )
5) How to teach PPU?
6) How to teach PD read
7) How ot teach PDP listening
8)How to teach grammar?
9 How to applly PIASP ( to teach grammar and pronunciation items)
10 ) How to deal with TD session?
Special thanks to my audience for thei great collaboration and coordination , they were amazing as usual with their great contribution and workshops , specially this meeting where all showed great mastery how to deal with each framework whic enable them plan a leanrning sequence without facing great problems . Thank you all
By : Mr Samir Bounab ( teacher trainer at MONE)
The power point links:
By : Mr Samir Bounab
This presentation is part of a series of open educational resources aimed at researchers and educators teaching research skills and teaching innovative practices. The resource and accompanying speaker's notes are available to download through a creative commons license from the African Universities’ Research Approaches programme (AURA) page on IDS OpenDocs: https://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/handle/123456789/8992
The educational curriculum for strengthening research practice was developed as part of the African Universities’ Research Approaches programme (AURA). This programme sought to strengthen research and teaching practices in East Africa through a blended learning approach mixing online and face to face learning interventions. Further information is available on the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) website: http://www.ids.ac.uk/project/african-universities-research-approaches-aura-capacity-development-programme
Author: Duvigneau, S (institute of Development Studies)
Effective Teaching & Learning Process in the ClassroomAjay Kumar
Classroom teaching is always the most important as well challenging part of the education system. We need to cater all kind of learners and need to finish the syllabus in the best way. I just tried to add some points based on my experience.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
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Developing-a-Lesson-Plan.pptx
1. Developing a Lesson Plan
Identify elements that can make up a
successful lesson.
Design a lesson to meet the needs of
a specific group of learners.
On your green post-it, describe your
group of students.
7. Learning objectives vs outcomes
Objectives Outcomes
What a student will
learn during the lesson.
‘Identify elements that
can make up a
successful lesson.’
How the student could
demonstrate their
learning.
‘Design a lesson to
meet the needs of a
specific group of
learners.’
8. Your learning objectives
E.g. ‘Understand the concept of a RCT and how
to critically appraise one’
Write one on your first pink post-it
9. Your learning outcomes
• How do you assess what your students have
learned?
• Is this idea of assessment common in your
teaching practice? If not, is there a reason
why not?
If you can identify a learning outcome, write one
on your second pink post-it
10. Lesson structure – the hook
What is going to engage your
students straight away?
• Is it something to think
about?
• Is it something they need
to write?
• Is it something they need
to discuss?
11. Lesson structure – the hook
With the person next to you, spend 2 minutes
discussing your hook.
Then write it on your first yellow post-it.
Don’t forget to consider
your students and your
lesson objective!
12. Lesson structure – ‘the middle bit’
The main content of your
lesson.
Vary activities if possible.
Depends on how you like
to teach and your
audience.
Lots of considerations here!
14. Some considerations
• Variation
• Challenge
• Differentiation
• Improvisation
Be thinking – how can you
develop activities that
stretch, challenge, support
and engage your students?
15. Variation
Varying activities allows learners to engage in
the material in different ways.
• Q & A
• Discussion (pairs, groups, whole class)
• Critical reading
• Analysis
• Summarising
• Practical planning
• Debate
• Role play
16. Frankly, there’s
no chance
I could do this
with some help
I’ve got
this
Challenge:
“Zone of
Proximal
Development”
Vygotsky
~ 1930
17. Differentiation
What might prevent
students from
accessing a task?
• Adjustment of teaching to meet student needs
• Allowing all to learn effectively
• Accounting for differences in prior knowledge & understanding
18. Ways to support students
• Modeling
– Running through an example yourself in front of
the group, before asking them to try it themselves
• Worked examples
– Providing samples of pre-completed tasks for
them to compare their own work against
• Scaffolding
– Giving structured steps for students to complete –
breaking a task down into manageable chunks
20. Ideas about content
Consider your students and your lesson
objective(s).
On your orange post-its, briefly describe two
activities that could help your students to
understand your objective.
21. Lesson structure – the plenary
Plenarius = complete
Wrapping up
• Summarise the lesson
• Refer back to the learning objective
• How do they know what they know?
• How do you know what they know?
22. Lesson structure – the plenary
With the person next to you, spend 2 minutes
discussing your plenary.
Then write it on your second yellow post-it.
23. “I want them to
come out with a
basic lesson
structure for their
own context”
Lots of post-its.
Focus on their
students.
Interactivity
Time for thinking
What can I drop?
24. Plenary
You should have six post-its with ideas.
Spend 2 minutes telling someone else about
your plan, then swap over.
Students
Learning
objectives
Hook
Main
content
Plenary
25. Lots of copying
from slides.
Teachers who just
read straight off
their PowerPoint!
Sitting in silence
doing questions or
reading the
textbook and
making notes on it.
When the lesson
takes forever to get
to the point.
When the
teacher
spends the
lesson talking
and the
students just
have to listen.
26. Competition,
especially
working in
teams against
others.
Group
discussion
or
practical
work.
When the teacher is actually
interested in what they are
telling you so they tell you
more than you need to know
so you understand it
properly – but then give you
printed notes or time to
write down the vital bits.
Activities where
students can
participate, also a
lesson where
information is
presented in
different ways.