Bda Lesson Plan Format
Bda Lesson Plan Format
Bda Lesson Plan Format
No man thinks more highly than I do of the patriotism, as well as abilities, of the very worthy gentlemen who
have just spoken to the House. But different men often see the same subject in different ways. Therefore, I hope
you will not think me disrespectful to those gentlemen if I speak my feelings freely and without limits. This is
no time for formality.
Techniques Selected
Name, and provide the reference for, each of the three different techniques you will be using.
Before Reading:
Purpose
I chose an adapted version of Patrick Henrys speech from centuries ago, it is important for students to
visualize what they are about to read. Patrick Henrys speech was a major cause of the American Revolution,
so students should be given the opportunity to visualize what is happening at that moment in time. Dramatic
Role Play will allow students to visualize what they are about to read.
Assessment of Objectives
(See Assessment Checklist for BDA Strategies)
Procedure
1. Have students count off by threes. Teacher will give students a description of what they are going to
role-play. (You all are at the Second Virginia Convention. Ones, you are going to be Patrick Henry,
who is giving a speech to the Convention that we have no choice but to go to war with Britain. Twos,
you are going to agree with Patrick Henry, and you have had enough with Britain. Threes, you are
going to disagree with Patrick Henrys speech and think we can peacefully fix things with the British.)
2. Have the students get in groups (one of each number) and them to plan and rehearse their role-plays.
Have groups volunteer to share their role-play with the class.
3. After a group reforms, have students in each group lead discussion about what just happened. Ask
groups if anybody visualized it differently and discussion similarities and differences in each groups
skit.
During Reading:
Purpose
With this famous speech, it might be hard for some students to comprehend what Patrick Henry to trying to
convey because of the vocabulary used. If students are coding the text, they are thinking about their thinking as
they read. It makes them stop and think, and allows them to interpret the text and draw their own conclusions.
Assessment of Objectives
(See Assessment Checklist for BDA Strategies)
Procedure
1. The teacher will explain the codes they will using, called INSERT (Interactive Notation System for
Effective Reading and Thinking):
confirms what you thought (prior knowledge- what you thought before & after the dramatic role-
play)
contradicts what you thought (before & after the dramatic role-play)
? Puzzles you
??? Confuses you
strikes you as important
! is new or interesting to you
Tell students that along with using codes, they are write whatever comes to their mind. (Model: I read a
line of speech and thought to myself, why did he say that? So I wrote, why did he say that next to that line.
When I read that men see the issue of British in two different ways I am going to write a check beside it because
it confirmed what I thought in the dramatic role-play.)
2. After you have modeling coding text, have students read the text and share the coding with a partner.
Give the students an option to partner read as well.
3. When the students are done, start discussion with the whole class by asking them to look through their
reading and have students share about exclamation points they wrote, and what exciting information
they learned.
4. Lead discussion into what they thought was confusing for them to read.
After Reading:
Purpose
Tweet the Text would be very motivating for students, since most of them are familiar with twitter and the idea
of getting your point across in only 140 characters. This allows students to use technology to synthesize the text.
It is important for students to be able to summarize what they read, and this engaging strategy allows them to
do so.
Assessment of Objectives
(See Assessment Checklist for BDA Strategies)
Procedure
1. After students have read the Newsela article, put them in pairs.
2. Have students take out their cell phones, or assign them laptops. Have students work together to create
a 140-character summary of the text.
3. Share with students that it is important to work together, and look back at their coding text and think
about to our discussion of what was important in the text. Remind them that their summary should
include the central idea and supporting details.
4. Challenge students to hit 140 characters on the dot and remind them that spaces count.
5. Once the students are finished when their summaries, have pairs share their tweets with the class.
6. Have an ongoing discussion about how different pairs shared the main idea of the speech in different,
creative ways.
Additional Sections
During strategy-If the ESL student is not comfortable independently reading, providing them to choral read
with a teacher or partner so student do not feel they are at risk for failure. Having them code the text out loud,
by asking questions and having them make connections in a casual conversation will further prepare them to
later on code texts by themselves.
After strategy- I would give ESL students the opportunity to create their summary the form of pictures and have
them write what they can about their illustrations. Also, having them tell you orally is another adaption.
Assessment Charts (you must include documents that demonstrate how you will you record what you are looking for in
each objective-charts, checklists, rubrics. What behaviors, skills, or accomplishments do you expect to see that will let
you know each student has reached your objective)
Student clearly shows their ideas of the description the teacher ______