Lesson Plan Annotated
Lesson Plan Annotated
Time: 50 Minutes
Start: 9:05
Finish: 10:05
Lesson Topic: Food Technology Practical Making hot, rich potato salad
Timing
Teaching Strategies/Learning
Experiences:
10 mins
coming to class).
Development
Q. Are any students having
difficulties with their recipe?
A. (The individual student could
have a different answer)
20 mins
30 mins
40 mins
Observed/Taught Lesson
Technology Food Technology
Year 9
Evaluation of Teaching
Identify the teaching strategies / learning experiences that were most and least
effective. Explain why.
There are multiple strategies that can be utilised by a teacher in order to be an efficient
and effective educator. One strategy that I learnt throughout these weeks was
differentiating your students. By knowing the students name, and some of their
strengths and weaknesses, youre able to assist them easily as well as get their
attention when needed. It is important that the students know they can rely on you and
form a teacher-student relationship. An additional strategy that I used was to find
other means than yelling. It was interesting to see how different supervising teachers
react when an individual student is misbehaving, some choose to ignore them, send
them outside or raise their voice. All strategies are reasonable, however, I noticed that
boys in particular do not respond well when yelled at. It is important to know that as a
teacher, raising your voice should not be the first option, if you are constantly yelling,
it will eventually loose its effect and the students will learn to never respond to it.
Many of the students took this as an opportunity to create an argument with the
teacher or misbehave more. Quite often, I thought it wouldve been more appropriate
if the teacher had pulled the student aside and had a discussion with them about their
behaviour and the consequences it has on his peers. It is not always possible to do so;
therefore taking privileges away or giving them punishments can also be a more
effective strategy than raising your voice.
How appropriate was the timing throughout the various sections of the lesson?
Why?
As my lesson was a food technology class, I had to be extremely accurate in terms of
timing. The particular recipe we were cooking involved 20 minutes just for the
potatoes to boil, as well as cutting, preparing and baking at the end. If the students
werent paying attention during the demonstration, it would have pushed back the
entire class, causing them to miss out on their food or be late to their next class.
Establishing a time line before the class is a productive way to ensure your lesson
flows smoothly, however, this time line should not be seen as concrete, you need to be
was washed and put away with 3 minutes to spare, leaving enough time for discussion
on the ingredients, methods and flow of the lesson.
Based on these reflections, outline the steps you should now take to improve your
teaching in future lessons.
Certain steps that I could improve on for further lessons would be my interaction
during a demonstration and the level of my voice. Often in a kitchen it is hard to
project your voice loud enough for the students to hear, I found it difficult getting the
attention of the students when needed and would have to go around to different
sections within the room. Having a key word or a clap could be used to grab the
students attention, when using that word all students would know to stop what they
are doing and pay attention to what the teacher has to say.
I also thought it was important to get the boys more involved in the demonstration. As
I was nervous, I did a lot of the demonstration without asking the boys questions
along the way. By including interactive questions or getting the students to help out
with the demonstration, they become more motivated and enthusiastic about the
lesson.