The Six Step Lesson Plan: A Framework For Developing Lesson Plans
The Six Step Lesson Plan: A Framework For Developing Lesson Plans
Step 4 Application
Application activities will lead the students to appreciate the overall themes and ideas in lesson. In order to create further understanding, the student must go beyond rote memorization and demonstrate real-world application of the newly-learned information. This process requires "higher-level critical-thinking skills" which result in ideas generated by the student rather than ideas presented by the teacher or by the text.
Step 5 Evaluation
Good instruction includes checking for student learning. This can be informal--questions that ask students to tell you what they know about the subject now--or formal--tests, worksheets, project presentations, oral reporting, etc.
Step 6 Closure
This gives students the opportunity to reflect on what they have learned, which is important for retention. Summarize what has been learned. Relate it to previous learning. Tell them what they will learn next. Give homework assignments.
More Set Up
Do you need to build vocabulary? Should you stimulate curiosity or empathy? Is there some background information you can give about the ideas or people in the reading? Should you talk through the article in advance and overview or highlight key concepts? Can you relate material from previous assignments to the new material?
In the second step, students encounter the new content, relating it to their discussions of the concepts during the set up stage. This may entail expanding their knowledge base with new facts, ideas, or opinions. Activities that are typically found in this lesson stage include: Demonstrations vocabulary expansion Examples & samples text completion exercises information gap tasks (such as jigsaw reading). The end goal of this stage is for students to practice new skills while demonstrating their comprehension of the basic concepts.
Ask yourself the question: How will your presentation help your students experience and interpret the material?
Relate story/text to personal experiences Record questions to discuss with the group (individual or groups/teams can create questions) Record examples of special or pleasing uses of language, imagery, or character/story development Dramatization Visualization Illustrations Discussion
Keys to Application
In the final stage of the framework, students further demonstrate their comprehension by creatively applying their new knowledge. Such application may take several forms:
Application
of the knowledge to personal experience,to an example, to a real life problem The end goal of this stage is for students to demonstrate both conceptual and skill mastery, and to provide a forum for practice.
More Application
theyve had about the material? (individual or group/team) Can students work in groups or teams to think beyond the material, and take further actions? (any applications for new knowledge in the class environment, and/or in the school or community?) Are there extra credit opportunities to offer as enrichment that can meet individual interests or needs?
Motivation Checklist How are you introducing the material? Is your anticipatory set engaging? Does it create interest? Have you posted an agenda for the day? Have you stated the objectives of the
lesson/unit?
Have you given an outline of the unit? Have you stated how you will assess their
learning?
Application Checklist
Do students see the practical application of the
material?
real objects and materials manipulatives (drawings, posters, brainstormingclusters, graphs, tables, maps, props, multimedia presentations, storyboards, storymaps) visuals (study-prints, text book-illustrations, overhead-projected prints, reproductions of paintings, and documents) graphic organizers (matrices, Venn diagrams, and webs) opportunities for interaction between all individuals in the classroom (creating a skit and acting it out, co-operative learning, collaborative learning, and student-generated stories based on personal experiences)
Summary
Where are they going?
How will they get there? How will they know when they get there?