1) This lesson plan teaches 2nd grade students about maps by having them design a map of their dream house.
2) Students will learn map terminology like title, symbols, legend, and compass. They will then create their own house map using these elements.
3) The teacher will assess student understanding by checking that their maps include a compass, legend, and title with correctly labeled symbols.
1) This lesson plan teaches 2nd grade students about maps by having them design a map of their dream house.
2) Students will learn map terminology like title, symbols, legend, and compass. They will then create their own house map using these elements.
3) The teacher will assess student understanding by checking that their maps include a compass, legend, and title with correctly labeled symbols.
1) This lesson plan teaches 2nd grade students about maps by having them design a map of their dream house.
2) Students will learn map terminology like title, symbols, legend, and compass. They will then create their own house map using these elements.
3) The teacher will assess student understanding by checking that their maps include a compass, legend, and title with correctly labeled symbols.
1) This lesson plan teaches 2nd grade students about maps by having them design a map of their dream house.
2) Students will learn map terminology like title, symbols, legend, and compass. They will then create their own house map using these elements.
3) The teacher will assess student understanding by checking that their maps include a compass, legend, and title with correctly labeled symbols.
Lesson Plan for Tuesday Grade: 2 Social Studies Strand: Geography Submitted By: Kendra Cope EDEL 453: Teaching Elementary School Social Science Nevada State College Spring 2014 Instructor: Karen Powell
Lesson Plan for Tuesday Strand: Geography submitted by: Kendra Cope
Nevada State College EDEL 453 - Spring 2014 Karen Powell- Instructor page 2 B. Summary of the Lesson Plan: This geography lesson is designed for 2 nd grade students to learn about how to read and construct a map. The students will design a map of their dream house and include a title of the map. C. Basic Information: Grade Level: 2 nd Grade Time to Complete this Lesson: 50 Minutes Groupings: Whole Group discussion, Independent for activity & assessment and partners for final discussion D. Materials: Globe World Map, USA Map, Street Map & House Map Paper, Pencil, Ruler, Colored Pencils
E. Objectives: o NV State Social Studies Standards G5.2.1 Identify titles and symbols maps. G5.2.3 Construct a map key from given symbols and choose a map title.
o Student-Friendly Standards G5.2.1 I can identify the title and symbols on a map G5.2.3 I can make a map with symbols and come up with a title. F. Vocabulary Globe a picture of Earth that is displayed on a round surface Map a picture of an area that is displayed on a flat surface Compass an instrument that tells you which direction it is facing Grid lines that go from north to south and east to west Lesson Plan for Tuesday Strand: Geography submitted by: Kendra Cope
Nevada State College EDEL 453 - Spring 2014 Karen Powell- Instructor page 3 Legend tells you what the different symbols mean Title name of your map G. Procedure: 1. Review with the whole class what a globe is and what a map is. 2. Bring the students attention to the classroom globe. Point to various parts of the world and see if any students can identify different countries or continents. (assessing prior knowledge) 3. Identify & discuss the various symbols on a map 4. Review vocabulary (globe, map, compass, grid, legend, title) 5. As a whole class, have a volunteer share their map that they created yesterday. 6. Ask questions about their map: o What symbols do you see? o Can you identify the legend and tell me what the symbols mean? o Where is the compass? o What are the titles of my maps? 7. Give the students the steps they need to complete their own dream house map. o They will need to draw a map of their house. o Show using my map how to construct lines and make rooms.
Lesson Plan for Tuesday Strand: Geography submitted by: Kendra Cope
Nevada State College EDEL 453 - Spring 2014 Karen Powell- Instructor page 4
H. Assessment: What will you use to measure student understanding? G5.2.3 Construct a map key from given symbols and choose a map title. I will have my students draw their own house map. Explain how you will know students understand the concepts from the lesson. The students will need to include a compass, legend and a title. If they label everything correctly then I will know that they understood the concept. I. Closure: I will have the students pair up with a partner and share their dream house map. They will need to successfully state all of their symbols, what they mean and where they are relation to the map. J. Reflection: 1. Which part of the lesson do you think will be the easiest for you to teach? I think the easiest part of the lesson for me to teach will be the vocabulary. Providing a visual is a great way to teach a word. Plus the students can touch it as well. 2. Which part will be most challenging for you to teach? Discussing the legend and compass will probably be the hardest part. I think they will understand the vocabulary, but actually breaking it down and deciding what each symbol means will be hard to explain. 3. How will you follow up or extend this lesson? I will have the students extend their knowledge of maps by learning how to use a globe. 4. What can you do for students who dont grasp the concepts? I would first find out which part they are struggling on. Then decide to break it down piece by piece. While they are completing their own map, they can describe to me what their house looks like. Then we can go room by room and make symbols, etc. 5. Which part of the lesson, if any, do you think might need to change? My vocabulary could probably change as they might be too hard. Lesson Plan for Tuesday Strand: Geography submitted by: Kendra Cope
Nevada State College EDEL 453 - Spring 2014 Karen Powell- Instructor page 5
6. When you were writing this lesson plan, what was the most difficult part? Trying to keep the lesson fun and engaging. Using our textbook and reading strategy 7 on page 50, helped me modify the lesson.